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45Which Subjects Should an IRB Protect? Two Moral ModelsIRB: Ethics & Human Research 4 (7): 5. 1982.
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65Political liberalism and Confucian democracyPhilosophical Forum 52 (1): 3-4. 2021.The Philosophical Forum, Volume 52, Issue 1, Page 3-4, Spring 2021.
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58AFTERWORDS Criticism and CounterthesesJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 32 (2): 267-274. 1973.
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221Douglas P. Lackey -- the moral case for unilateral nuclear disarmamentPhilosophy and Social Criticism 10 (3-4): 157-171. 1984.
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77Case Studies: Can a Healthy Subject Volunteer to Be Injured in Research?Hastings Center Report 16 (4): 31. 1986.
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The evolution of the modern terrorist state: area bombing and nuclear deterrenceIn Igor Primoratz (ed.), Terrorism: The Philosophical Issues, Palgrave-macmillan. 2004.
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95Atheism, philosophy, pornography, and sodomy: The first libertinesPhilosophical Forum 42 (4): 347-350. 2011.
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1Post war environmental damage : a study in jus post bellumIn Larry May & Zachary Hoskins (eds.), International Criminal Law and Philosophy, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
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48Review of Larry may, Aggression and Crimes Against Peace (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (8). 2008.
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60Empirical disconfirmation and ethical counter-exampleJournal of Value Inquiry 10 (1): 30-34. 1976.
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64Slaughterhouse: Bosnia and the Failure of the West, David Rieff , 240 pp., $20.00 cloth (review)Ethics and International Affairs 10 207-212. 1996.
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75Out on a Nuclear LimbDialogue 26 (2): 341-. 1987.Nuclear War, edited by Fox and Groarke, is one of five recent anthologies containing new essays by philosophers on the subject of nuclear war. The Blake and Pole volumes, containing essays mainly by British philosophers, are distinguished by unrelenting and comprehensive opposition to British and American policy, and by the fame of the contributors, which include Anthony Kenny, Michael Dummett, and Bernard Williams. The Chicago volume contains a number of excellent papers by philosophers and the…Read more
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142Immoral Risks: A Deontological Critique of Nuclear Deterrence: DOUGLAS P. LACKEYSocial Philosophy and Policy 3 (1): 154-175. 1985.I. Beyond Utilitarianism In the summer of 1982, I published an article called “Missiles and Morals,” in which I argued on utilitarian grounds that nuclear deterrence in its present form is not morally justifiable. The argument of “Missiles and Morals” compared the most likely sort of nuclear war to develop under nuclear deterrence with the most likely sort of nuclear war to develop under American unilateral nuclear disaramament. For a variety of reasons, I claimed diat the number of casualties i…Read more
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104Ethical Reflections on Company-Owned Life InsuranceJournal of Business Ethics 80 (4): 845-854. 2008.COLI – company owned life insurance – is often purchased by firms on employees in whom the firm has no demonstrable insurable interest. Though no immediate harm comes to individuals insured in this way, purchasing such policies raises moral questions. From a Kantian framework, questions arise about reciprocity and fairness, the deception of employees, the generation of mistrust, and the use of the employee’s life as a means to profit. No compensating social good is served by the sale of these po…Read more
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75Disarmament revisited: A reply to Kavka and HardinPhilosophy and Public Affairs 12 (3): 261-265. 1983.
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The Development of Ethics: A Historical and Critical StudyPhilosophical Forum 42 (3): 269-271. 2011.
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117Giotto in Padua: A New Geography of the Human SoulThe Journal of Ethics 9 (3-4): 551-572. 2005.In the Arena Chapel in Padua, Giotto painted seven allegorical representations of virtues and seven allegorical representations of vices. This article probes the sources for the list of virtues and the list of vices. The ensemble of virtues can be located in St. Thomas Aquinas; the ensemble of the vices, however, is original. The result is a new account of vices that displaces the odler account of the “seven deadly sins.”.