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Michael Louis Corrado

University of North Carolina (System)
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    41
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 More details
  • University of North Carolina (System)
    Regular Faculty
Brown University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1970
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Law
20th Century Philosophy
  • All publications (41)
  •  135
    How to do things on purpose: R. A. duff'sintention, agency, and criminal liability (review)
    Law and Philosophy 11 (3): 265-281. 1992.
    There is a lot of material in this book, and Duff handles most of it very well. It is unfortunate that he felt the need to tie his discussion of serious philosophical questions in the criminal law to larger overarching questions of philosophy. It is possible that current conceptions of intentional action implicate dualism (or Dualism), I suppose, but that would be a book-length discussion all of its own. It would begin with a careful discussion of just what dualism is, and would track down the v…Read more
    There is a lot of material in this book, and Duff handles most of it very well. It is unfortunate that he felt the need to tie his discussion of serious philosophical questions in the criminal law to larger overarching questions of philosophy. It is possible that current conceptions of intentional action implicate dualism (or Dualism), I suppose, but that would be a book-length discussion all of its own. It would begin with a careful discussion of just what dualism is, and would track down the various ways in which particular substantive positions on intentional action rule out alternatives to dualism. Such a work might be interesting indeed. It would be interesting, for example, to see a discussion of a type of conceptual dualism that I suspect Duff would find congenial: a dualism that insisted upon the autonomy of purposive notions and rejected the causal analysis of intentional action. Would that sort of dualism make any difference at all for the criminal law? It might, and it might not. But in any event that is not what we find in this book, which, for all of its healthy enthusiasm for the place of philosophy in the law shows an excessive tolerance for makeweight arguments about the great questions.
    Punishment in Criminal LawAutonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  83
    Response to Michael Davis
    Criminal Justice Ethics 15 (2): 25-29. 1996.
    Political Ethics
  •  28
    Review of Freedom and Determinism, ed. Joseph Keim Campbell, Michael O’Rourke, and David Shier (review)
    Essays in Philosophy 10 (2): 223-231. 2009.
    Theories of Free Will
  •  59
    Compatibilism, Hard Incompatibilism, and Responsibility
    Essays in Philosophy 10 (1). 2009.
  •  130
    The power to act
    Philosophical Studies 37 (2): 177-185. 1980.
    Political Power
  •  37
    The Nature of Necessity (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 15 (2): 231-234. 1975.
    Logical Semantics and Logical Truth
  •  45
    Ontology and the Vicious Circle Principle (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 14 (3): 375-378. 1974.
  •  58
    A Note on Harman on Intending
    Journal of Critical Analysis 7 (3): 105-108. 1978.
    Intentions
  •  78
    On believing inscriptions to be true
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 36 (1): 59-73. 1975.
  •  72
    Review of Teleological Realism: Mind, Agency, and Explanation, by Scott Sehon (review)
    Essays in Philosophy 11 (2): 231-237. 2010.
    Reasons and Causes
  •  47
    Egalitarianism and the Problem of Tort Liability
    Philosophical Issues 11 (1): 388-419. 2001.
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