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48In order to assess to the degree to which the provision of economic incentives can result in justified inequalities, we need to distinguish between compensatory incentive payments and non-compensatory incentive payments. From a liberal egalitarian perspective, economic inequalities traceable to the provision of compensatory incentive payments are generally justifiable. However, economic inequalities created by the provision of non-compensatory incentive payments are more problematic. I argue tha…Read more
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107Age differences in negative and positive expectancy bias in comorbid depression and anxietyCognition and Emotion 32 (8): 1531-1544. 2017.ABSTRACTAnxious individuals report disproportionately negative expectations concerning the future, termed the negative expectancy bias. In contrast, ageing is associated with an inflated expectancy for positive future events. A recent study [Steinman, S. A., Smyth, F. L., Bucks, R. S., MacLeod, C., & Teachman, B. A.. Anxiety-linked expectancy bias across the adult lifespan. Cognition and Emotion, 27, 345–355. doi:10.1080/02699931.2012.711743] found using an interpretation bias task, a negative e…Read more
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116Equality and family values: conflict or harmony?Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 21 (3): 301-313. 2018.This paper provides a critical commentary on the claim advanced by Harry Brighouse and Adam Swift in their book Family Values: The Ethics of Parent–Child Relationships that there is an ineliminable conflict between relationship goods and fair equality of opportunity. I argue there need be no conflict between family values and equality of opportunity in a suitably non-hierarchical society. I also argue that the idea that equality of opportunity might be served by abolishing the family is mistaken…Read more
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121Just Schools and Good Childhoods: Non‐preparatory Dimensions of Educational JusticeJournal of Applied Philosophy 35 (S1): 76-89. 2018.This article offers an account of at least some of the non-preparatory dimensions of education and their significance for a theory of educational justice. I argue that just schools should play a role in facilitating goods of childhood. I also defend an egalitarian view about the access children should have in school to the resources and opportunities associated with the non-preparatory dimensions of education.
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1Liberalism, Justice and MarketsDissertation, Cornell University. 1993.This dissertation examines Ronald Dworkin's liberal theory of political morality. According to Dworkin, liberalism must be conceived as a species of egalitarianism. It provides an interpretation of what is held to be the most fundamental demand of political morality, namely that individuals be regarded as equal moral persons and as entitled consequently to equal concern and respect. I evaluate Dworkin's interpretation of egalitarianism, particularly as this exhibits itself in his theory of equal…Read more
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44Liberalism, Justice, and Markets: A Critique of Liberal EqualityOxford University Press UK. 1998.This important new study presents a systematic and definitive critique of Ronald Dworkin's highly influential theory of liberal equality. Focusing on the connection Dworkin attempts to establish between economic markets and liberal egalitarian political morality, the study examines his contention that markets have an indispensable role to play in the articulation of liberal ideals of distributive justice, individual liberty, and state neutrality. Subjecting the central tenents of this theory to …Read more
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79Is memory caught in the mesh?Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (1): 30-30. 1997.Can memory be cast as a system that meshes events to actions? This commentary considers the concepts of mesh versus association, arguing that thus far the distinction is inadequate. However, the goal of shifting to an action-based view of memory has merit, most notably in emphasizing memory as a skill and in focusing on processes as opposed to structures.
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62Discovering and training the components of intelligenceBehavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (4): 597-598. 1980.
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88Enhanced probing of attentional bias: The independence of anxiety-linked selectivity in attentional engagement with and disengagement from negative informationCognition and Emotion 28 (7): 1287-1302. 2014.
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107Biased attentional engagement with, and disengagement from, negative information: Independent cognitive pathways to anxiety vulnerability?Cognition and Emotion 28 (2): 245-259. 2014.
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62Robert S. Taylor, Reconstructing Rawls: The Kantian Foundations of Justice as Fairness. Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 32 (2): 149-150. 2012.
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97Justice, Educational Equality, and SufficiencyCanadian Journal of Philosophy 40 (S1): 151-175. 2010.Among the novel objects that attracted my attention during my stay in the United States, nothing struck me more forcibly than the general equality of condition among the people. (de Tocqueville 1990, 7)There are significant inequalities in the lives of America's children, including inequalities in the education that these children receive. These educational inequalities include not only disparities in funding per pupil but also in class size, teacher qualification, and resources such as books, l…Read more
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129Hypnosis and the control of attention: Where to from here?Consciousness and Cognition 20 (2): 321-324. 2011.Can suggestion, particularly hypnotic suggestion, influence cognition? Addressing this intriguing question experimentally is on the rise in cognitive research, nowhere more prevalently than in the domain of cognitive control and attention. This may well rest on the intuitive connection between hypnotic suggestion and attention, where the hypnotist controls the subject’s attention. Particularly impressive has been the work of Raz and his colleagues demonstrating the modulation and even the comple…Read more
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132Manipulation of Attention at Study Affects an Explicit but Not an Implicit Test of MemoryConsciousness and Cognition 5 (1-2): 165-175. 1995.We investigated the impact of attention during encoding on later retrieval. During study, participants read some words aloud and named the print color of other words aloud . Then one of two memory tests was administered. The explicit test—recognition—required conscious recollection of whether a word was studied. Previously read words were recognized more accurately than were previously color named words. This contrasted sharply with performance on the implicit test—repetition priming in lexical …Read more
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270The Stroop task in cognitive researchIn Amy Wenzel & David C. Rubin (eds.), Cognitive Methods and Their Application to Clinical Research, American Psychological Association. pp. 17--40. 2005.
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223Liberal neutrality or liberal tolerance?Law and Philosophy 16 (5). 1997.This paper explores tensions in Ronald Dworkin's liberal theory (and liberalism more generally) about the appropriate relationship of the state to the different conceptions of the good that may be adopted by its citizens. Liberal theory generally supposes that the state must exhibit a kind of impartiality to different conceptions of the good. This impartiality is often thought to be captured by an anti-perfectionist ideal of liberal neutrality. But neutrality is often criticized as an ideal that…Read more
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117If You're an Egalitarian, How Come You're So Rich? G. A. Cohen. Harvard University Press, 2000, xi + 233 pages (review)Economics and Philosophy 18 (2): 351-385. 2002.
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104Emotion Regulation and the Cognitive-Experimental Approach to Emotional DysfunctionEmotion Review 3 (1): 62-73. 2011.Since the 1980s, there has been a steady growth of interest in the psychological mechanisms that regulate normal emotional experience. In this same period, cognitive-experimental researchers have sought to delineate the information processing biases that characterize emotional disorders. Exciting potential synergies exist between these two areas of investigation. In this article, we consider ways in which reciprocal benefits could be gained by the constructive transfer of theoretical ideas and m…Read more
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84Anxiety-linked task performance: Dissociating the influence of restricted working memory capacity and increased investment of effortCognition and Emotion 23 (4): 753-781. 2009.No abstract
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91Brief report negative selectivity effects and emotional selectivity effects in anxiety: Differential attentional correlates of state and trait variablesCognition and Emotion 18 (5): 711-720. 2004.
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115Rational Woman: A Feminist Critique of Dichotomy 2nd editionContemporary Political Theory 2 (3): 383-385. 2003.
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72How Priming Affects Two Speeded Implicit Tests of Remembering: Naming Colors versus Reading WordsConsciousness and Cognition 5 (1-2): 73-90. 1995.Three experiments investigated two timed implicit tests of memory—word reading and color naming. Using the study–test procedure, Experiments 1 and 2 showed that studied words caused reliable facilitation in word reading but no interference in color naming relative to unstudied words. Indeed, there was a small amount of facilitation in color naming as well. Experiment 3 further explored the color naming task by alternating shorter study and test intervals and adding control trials consisting of l…Read more
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100Examining attentional biases underlying trait anxiety in younger and older adultsCognition and Emotion 28 (1): 84-97. 2014.
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94How Victim Sensitivity leads to Uncooperative Behavior via Expectancies of InjusticeFrontiers in Psychology 6. 2015.
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Areas of Interest
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |