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Dispassion and the Ethical Life: An Investigation of Causal and Conceptual Connections Among Belief, Desire, Emotion, and the GoodDissertation, The University of Connecticut. 1982.This dissertation considers some normative and meta-ethical implications of a theory of emotion. In Chapter 2 emotion is argued to be belief plus strong desire. The 'strong desire' qualifier is defended against the more exclusively cognitive theories of William Lyons and Robert Solomon. Chapter 3 provides an explication of the 'dispassion thesis', which is the main thesis to be defended in this dissertation. The dispassion thesis states that dispassion, or the absence of emotion, is good; put di…Read more
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21Dispassion and the Ethical LifeIn Roger Ames, Robert C. Solomon & Joel Marks (eds.), Emotions in Asian Thought: A Dialogue in Comparative Philosophy, Suny Press. pp. 139. 1995.
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93Emotion East and West: Introduction to a Comparative PhilosophyPhilosophy East and West 41 (1). 1991.
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90When is a fallacy not a fallacy?Metaphilosophy 19 (3‐4): 307-312. 1988.The informal fallacies can be conceived as enthymemes that are formally valid. But, then, what accounts for our sense of their fallaciousness? I explain this in terms of the notion of a warrant.
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886Heaven Can't Wait: A Critique of Current Planetary Defence PolicyIn Jai Galliott (ed.), Commercial Space Exploration: Ethics, Policy and Governance, Ashgate. pp. 71-90. 2015.It is now generally recognized that Earth is at risk of a devastating collision with an asteroid or a comet. Impressive strides in our understanding of this threat have been made in recent decades, and various efforts to deal with it have been undertaken. However, the pace of government action hasn’t kept up with the advance of our knowledge. Despite the daunting dimensions of planetary defense, one intrepid NGO has stepped up to the plate: The B612 Foundation has embarked on a half-billion-doll…Read more
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142Innocent and Innocuous: The Case Against Animal ResearchBetween the Species (10): 98-117. 2010.Animal research is a challenging issue for the animal advocate because of what, besides animal well-being, is considered to be at stake, namely, human health. This article seeks to vindicate the antivivisectionist position. The standard defense of animal research as promoting the overwhelming good of human health is refuted on both factual and logical, or normative-theoretical, grounds. The author then attempts to clinch the case by arguing that animal research violates a deontic principle. Howe…Read more
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164A planet by any other name: An exercise in astro-metaphysicsThink 5 (14): 103-106. 2007.Joel Marks discusses the philosophical aspects of a question recently in the news: is Pluto a planet, or not?
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114Activism as Integrity (review)Philosophy Now (67): 44-45. 2008.Review of Lee Hall's book, Capers in the Churchyard: Animal Rights Advocacy in the Age of Terror. Ostensibly about tactics in the animal rights movement, the book is in fact a manifesto for thinking about nonhuman animals in a wholly different way from what we have become accustomed to. The review focuses on the welfare/rights debate in the animal movement.
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6The difference between motivation and desireIn The Ways of Desire: New Essays in Philosophical Psychology on the Concept of Wanting, Precedent. pp. 133--147. 1986.
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142Accept No Substitutes: The Ethics of AlternativesHastings Center Report 42 (s1). 2012.It is common to argue that animal experimentation is justified by its essential contribution to the advancement of medical science. But note that this argument actually contains two premises: an empirical claim that animal experimentation is essential to the advancement of medical science and an ethical claim that if research is essential to the advancement of medical science, then it is justified. Both claims are open to challenge, but in the logic of the case, only one of them needs to be show…Read more
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159“There’s No Room in the Worksheet” and Other Fallacies about Professional Ethics in the CurriculumTeaching Ethics 4 (2): 77-88. 2004.Despite the apparently universal recognition of a pervasive "success at any cost" amorality in the professional and business world, and the need to do something about it, attempts to establish a campus-wide professional ethics curriculum continue to encounter resistance at many colleges and universities. The main stumbling block seems to be a purely practical one: How do you fit a course on professional ethics into academic worksheets that are already over-crowded with essential technical course…Read more
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76Live Free or Die (review)Animal Law 17 (1): 243-250. 2010.In On Their Own Terms (Darien, CT: Nectar Bat Press, 2010), Lee Hall articulates a theory that wild animals, due to their autonomous nature, are endowed with rights, but domesticated animals lack rights because they are not autonomous. Hall then argues that the rights of wild animals require that humans let them alone, and that, despite the fact that domestic animals lack rights, humans are required to take care of them because it is humans who brought them into existence. While sympathetic to H…Read more
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92Hard Atheism and the Ethics of Desire: An Alternative to MoralityPalgrave Macmillan. 2016.This book challenges the widespread assumption that the ethical life and society must be moral in any objective sense. In his previous works, Marks has rejected both the existence of such a morality and the need to maintain verbal, attitudinal, practical, and institutional remnants of belief in it. This book develops these ideas further, with emphasis on constructing a positive alternative. Calling it “desirism”, Marks illustrates what life and the world would be like if we lived in accordance w…Read more
APA Eastern Division
New Haven, CT, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Mind |