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123Brian Leiter, Objectivity in Law and Morals (review)Philosophical Inquiry 24 (1-2): 123-126. 2002.
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5Death Penalties: a Review of Raoul Berger, Death Penalties (review)Duke Law Journal 1984 624-29. 1984.This is a critical review of Death Penalties by constitutional scholar Raoul Berger. It rebuts Berger's argument that the Eighth Amendment "no cruel and unusual punishments" clause validates capital punishment.
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65Three Anarchical Fallacies: An Essay on Political AuthorityCambridge University Press. 1998.How is a legitimate state possible? Obedience, coercion and intrusion are three ideas that seem inseparable from all government and seem to render state authority presumptively illegitimate. This book exposes three fallacies inspired by these ideas and in doing so challenges assumptions shared by liberals, libertarians, cultural conservatives, moderates and Marxists. In three clear and tightly argued essays William Edmundson dispels these fallacies and shows that living in a just state remains a…Read more
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53Review of Tom Campbell, Rights: A Critical Introduction (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (12). 2006.
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2Jaap C. Hage, Reasoning with Rules: An Essay on Legal Reasoning and Its Underlying Logic Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 18 (3): 178-179. 1998.
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153Civility as political constraintRes Publica 8 (3): 217-229. 2002.The everyday virtue of civility functions as a constraint upon informal social pressures. Can civility also be understood, as John Rawls has proposed, as a distinctively political constraint? I contrast Rawls's project of constraining the political with Mill's of constraining both the social and the political, and explore Rawls's account of the relation between the two. I argue that Rawls's political duty of civility rests on the assumption that the political is peculiarly coercive; ignores the …Read more
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257Because I Said SoProblema. Anuario de FilosofĂa y Teoria Del Derecho 7 (7): 41-61. 2013.Political authority is the moral power to impose moral duties upon a perhaps unwilling citizenry. David Enoch has proposed that authority be understood as a matter of "robust" duty-giving. This paper argues that Enoch's conditions for attempted robust duty- or reason-giving are, along with his non-normative success condition, implausibly strong. Moreover, Enoch's attempt and normative- success conditions ignore two facts. The first is that success requires that citizens be tolerant of modest err…Read more
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182Afterword: Proportionality and the difference death makesCriminal Justice Ethics 21 (2): 40-43. 2002.Proponents and opponents of the death penalty both typically assume that punishment, in some form or other, is justified, somehow or other, and that just punishment must in some sense be proportionate to the crime. These shared assumptions turn out to embarrass both parties. Proponents have to explain why certain prima facie proportionate punishments, such as torture, are off the table, while death remains, so to speak, on it. Opponents have to explain why their favored alternatives to capital p…Read more
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172Charlie Hebdo Meets Utility MonsterThe Critique. forthcoming.The Charlie Hebdo massacre in January 2015 and the subsequent attacks of November 13 cast a garish light onto a conundrum at the center of how liberal democracies understand themselves. The Syrian emigrant crisis has added further color. How can a tolerant, liberal political culture tolerate the presence of intolerant, illiberal, sub-cultures while remaining true to its principles of tolerance? The problem falls within the intersection of two developments in the thinking of John Rawls, the great…Read more
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44Schauer on precedent in the U.s. Supreme courtGeorgia State University Law Review 24 (2): 403-13. 2007.Recent critics of the Roberts Court chide it for its lack of regard for precedent. Fred Schauer faults these critics for erroneously assuming that a rule of stare decisis formerly played a significant role in the Supreme Court's decision-making. In fact, it has long played only a rare and weak role in the Court's work. Nonetheless, according to Schauer, the critics are to be thanked for invigorating a needed debate about the importance of "stability, consistency, settlement, reliance, notice, an…Read more
APA Eastern Division
Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Law |
Areas of Interest
| Social and Political Philosophy |