University of California, Berkeley
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1982
APA Eastern Division
Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America
  •  6
    Book Review (review)
    Law and Philosophy 34 (2): 229-232. 2015.
  •  5
    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
  •  148
    Politics in a State of Nature
    Ratio Juris 26 (2): 149-186. 2013.
    Aristotle thought we are by nature political animals, but the state-of-nature tradition sees political society not as natural but as an artifice. For this tradition, political society can usefully be conceived as emerging from a pre-political state of nature by the exercise of innate normative powers. Those powers, together with the rest of our native normative endowment, both make possible the construction of the state, and place sharp limits on the state's just powers and prerogatives. A state…Read more
  •  19
    Review of Tom Campbell, Rights: A Critical Introduction (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (12). 2006.
  •  64
    Coercion
    In Andrei Marmor (ed.), Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Law, Routledge. 2012.
    This chapter explains the concept of coercion as it features in recent legal and political philosophical work.
  •  38
    Contextualist Answers to Skepticism, and What a Lawyer Cannot Know
    Florida State University Law Review 30 1-23. 2002.
    Contextualism answers skepticism by proposing a variable standard of justification, keyed to the context of utterance. A lawyer's situation with respect to a criminal defendant's factual guilt is a special one. The argument here is that in this special context an especially high standard of epistemic justification applies. The standard is even more exacting than the proof-beyond-reasonable-doubt standard that juries are sworn to follow. The upshot is that criminal defense lawyers normally ca…Read more
  •  759
    Why legal theory is political philosophy
    Legal Theory 19 (4): 331-346. 2013.
    The concept of law is not a theorist's invention but one that people use every day. Thus one measure of the adequacy of a theory of law is its degree of fidelity to the concept as it is understood by those who use it. That means as far as possible. There are important truisms about the law that have an evaluative cast. The theorist has either to say what would make those evaluative truisms true or to defend her choice to dismiss them as false of law or not of the essence of law. Thus the legal t…Read more
  •  1
    Social Meaning, Compliance Conditions, and Law's Claim to Authority
    Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 15 (1): 51-67. 2002.
    Political authorities claim to be able to impose moral duties on citizens by the mere expedient of legislating. This claim is problematic -- in fact, among theorists, it is widely denied that political authorities have such powers. I argue that the legitimacy of political authority is not contingent upon the truth of its claim to be able to impose moral duties by mere legislation. Such claims are better seen as exercises of semiotic techniques to alter social meanings. These alterations serve to…Read more
  •  116
    An ambitious proposal by Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka seeks to break out of an impasse that animal-rights advocacy seems to have reached. They divide the animal kingdom into three categories and distribute rights accordingly. Domesticated animals are to be treated as citizens, enjoying the same rights and duties as human citizens (adjusting for relevant differences in ability, just as we do for children and the severely cognitively handicapped). Wild animal species are to be treated as sovere…Read more