•  189
    Sin and Suffering in a Catholic Understanding of Medical Ethics
    Christian Bioethics 12 (2): 165-186. 2006.
    Drawing chiefly on recent sources, in Part One I sketch an untraditional way of articulating what I claim to be central elements of traditional Catholic morality, treating it as based in virtues, focused on the recipients (“patients”) of our attention and concern, and centered in certain person-to-person role-relationships. I show the limited and derivative places of “natural law,” and therefore of sin, within that framework. I also sketch out some possible implications for medical ethics of thi…Read more
  • Espagne 1986-1990
    Les Etudes Philosophiques 34 (n/a): 250. 1992.
  •  313
    What if human joy went on endlessly? Suppose, for example, that each human generation were followed by another, or that the Western religions are right when they teach that each human being lives eternally after death. If any such possibility is true in the actual world, then an agent might sometimes be so situated that more than one course of action would produce an infinite amount of utility. Deciding whether to have a child born this year rather than next is a situation wherein an agent may f…Read more
  • L. Polo, Teoría del conocimiento (review)
    Acta Philosophica 3 (2). 1994.
  •  212
    Race as a Social Construction
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 26 115-133. 2019.
    This paper raises serious problems for the commonly held claim that races are socially constructed. The first section sketches out an approach to our construction of institutional phenomena that, taking Searle’s general approach, restricts social construction proper to cases where we adopt rules that bind relevant parties to treat things of a type in certain ways, thus constituting important roles in, and parts of, our social lives. I argue this conception, construction-by-rules, helps distingui…Read more
  •  11
    5. Are Some People Better Off Dead? A Reflection
    Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 2 (1). 1999.
  •  88
    The Game Between a Biased Reviewer and His Editor
    with Rosa Rodriguez-Sánchez and J. Fdez-Valdivia
    Science and Engineering Ethics 25 (1): 265-283. 2019.
    This paper shows that, for a large range of parameters, the journal editor prefers to delegate the choice to review the manuscript to the biased referee. If the peer review process is informative and the review reports are costly for the reviewers, even biased referees with extreme scientific preferences may choose to become informed about the manuscript’s quality. On the contrary, if the review process is potentially informative but the reviewer reports are not costly for the referees, the bias…Read more