•  109
    The principle of equal opportunity
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 15 (4): 473-485. 1977.
  •  98
    Visual belief
    Noûs 12 (3): 317-328. 1978.
  •  47
  •  95
    The Moral Foundations of Professional Ethics
    Hastings Center Report 11 (3): 38. 1981.
    Book reviewed in this article: The Moral Foundations of Professional Ethics. By Alan H. Goldman.
  •  514
    The entitlement theory of distributive justice
    Journal of Philosophy 73 (21): 823-835. 1976.
  •  201
    The aesthetic value of representation in painting
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (2): 297-310. 1995.
  •  61
    Reply to Jaggar
    Social Theory and Practice 4 (2): 235-237. 1977.
  •  248
    Reason Internalism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 71 (3). 2007.
    This paper defends strong internalism about reasons, the view that reasons must relate to pre-existing motivational states, from several kinds of counterexamples, supposed desire independent reasons, that have been proposed. A central distinction drawn is that between there being a reason and an agent's having a reason. For an agent to have an F reason, she must be F-minded. Reasons, as what motivate us, are states of affairs and not themselves desires or motivational states, but they must conne…Read more
  •  167
    The Broad View of Aesthetic Experience
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 71 (4): 323-333. 2013.
    Peter Kivy and Noël Carroll advocate a narrow view of aesthetic experience according to which it consists mainly in attention to formal properties. Excluded are cognitive and moral properties. I defend the broader view that includes the latter properties. I argue first that cognition and moral assessment can be inseparable in experience from grasp of form and expressiveness. Second, Kivy and Carroll must extend the notion of form itself beyond ordinary usage to accommodate acknowledged aesthetic…Read more
  •  219
    The education of taste
    British Journal of Aesthetics 30 (2): 105-116. 1990.
  •  124
    The Appeal of the Mystery
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69 (3): 261-272. 2011.
  •  254
    The Case Against Objective Values
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 11 (5): 507-524. 2008.
    While objective values need not be intrinsically motivating, need not actually motivate us, they would determine what we ought to pursue and protect. They would provide reasons for actions. Objective values would come in degrees, and more objective value would provide stronger reasons. It follows that, if objective value exists, we ought to maximize it in the world. But virtually no one acts with that goal in mind. Furthermore, objective value would exist independently of our subjective valuings…Read more
  •  264
  •  173
    Toward a new theory of punishment
    Law and Philosophy 1 (1). 1982.
    Criteria for a successful theory of punishment include first, that it specify a reasonable limit to punishments in particular cases, and second, that it allow benefits to outweigh costs in a penal institution.It is argued that traditional utilitarian and retributive theories fail to satisfy both criteria, and that they cannot be coherently combined so as to do so. Retributivism specifies a reasonable limit in its demand that punishment equal crime, but this limit fails to allow benefits to outwe…Read more
  •  47
    The Death of Epistemology: A Premature Burial
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 62 (2): 203-210. 1981.
  • Rights, Utilities and Contracts
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 3 (n/a): 121. 1977.
  •  98
    Response to Gert on Practical Reason
    The Journal of Ethics 16 (1): 35-37. 2012.
    This is a response to Joshua Gert’s criticisms of my book Reasons from Within and defense of his own contrasting position
  •  183
  •  91
    Rights, Utilities and Contracts
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 7 (sup1): 121-135. 1977.
  •  85
    Real People (Natural Differences and the Scope of Justice)
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (2). 1987.
    The idea that a just political system must ignore or nullify socially caused initial advantages in competing for positions and other social benefits is as old as political philosophy itself. Plato called for social mobility among his classes so that all could gravitate toward the classes for which their temperaments naturally suited them. The idea that the system must take positive steps to correct for these differences among individuals is likewise as old as the concept of public education, the…Read more
  •  124
    Skepticism about goodness and rightness
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 29 (S1): 167-183. 1991.
  •  112
    Rules and moral reasoning
    Synthese 117 (2): 229-250. 1998.
  •  327
    Realism about aesthetic properties
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 51 (1): 31-37. 1993.
  •  118
    This is as much a book in metaphysics as æsthetics. Zemach supports his views of æsthetic properties and fictional entities by proposing an original basic ontology. There are not many examples from or observations on particular artworks, although he does make some interesting claims about contemporary art and the source of its value. But for originality and depth, for the systematic nature of its vision and the rigour and clarity of its arguments, it is hard to praise this book too highly. I say…Read more
  •  96
    Reference and linguistic authority
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 17 (3): 305-321. 1979.