•  1213
    Critical Notice of Robert Audi, The Good in the Right
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (2): 305-325. 2007.
    Critical notice of Robert Audi's The Good in the Right in which doubts are raised about the epistemological and ethical doctrines it defends. It doubts that an appeal to Kant is a profitable way to defend Rossian normative intuitionism.
  •  339
    Henry Sidgwick's Practical Ethics: A Defense
    Utilitas 18 (3): 199-217. 2006.
    Henry Sidgwick's Practical Ethics offers a novel approach to practical moral issues. In this article, I defend Sidgwick's approach against recent objections advanced by Sissela Bok, Karen Hanson, Michael S. Pritchard, and Michael Davis. In the first section, I provide some context within which to situate Sidgwick's view. In the second, I outline the main features of Sidgwick's methodology and the powerful rationale that lies behind it. I emphasize elements of the view that help to defend it, not…Read more
  •  6277
    Utilitarianism, Welfare, Children
    In Alexander Bagattini & Colin Macleod (eds.), The Nature of Children's Well-Being: Theory and Practice, Springer. pp. 85-103. 2014.
    Utilitarianism is the view according to which the only basic requirement of morality is to maximize net aggregate welfare. This position has implications for the ethics of creating and rearing children. Most discussions of these implications focus either on the ethics of procreation and in particular on how many and whom it is right to create, or on whether utilitarianism permits the kind of partiality that child rearing requires. Despite its importance to creating and raising children, there ar…Read more
  •  1598
    On Sidgwick's Demise: A Reply to Professor Deigh
    Utilitas 22 (1): 70-77. 2010.
    In ‘Sidgwick’s Epistemology’, John Deigh argues that Henry Sidgwick’s The Methods of Ethics ‘was not perceived during his lifetime as a major and lasting contribution to British moral philosophy’ and that interest in it declined considerably after Sidgwick’s death because the epistemology on which it relied ‘increasingly became suspect in analytic philosophy and eventually [it was] discarded as obsolete’. In this article I dispute these claims.
  •  7532
    Bioethics in Canada (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2013.
    This is the table of contents of and introduction to a textbook entitled Bioethics in Canada. It is designed mainly for use in Canada. Of the 51 articles that it contains, 26 are written by Canadians.