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Alan Clune

Sam Houston State University
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  •  Publications
    7
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 More details
  • Sam Houston State University
    Department of Psychology and Philosophy
    Lecturer
Huntsville, Texas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Critical Thinking
Applied Ethics, Misc
Animal Rights
Animal Experimentation
Moral Status of Animals
Animal Ethics, Misc
1 more
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Mind, Miscellaneous
Animal Minds
  • All publications (7)
  •  32
    A Critical Assessment of Varner's Proposal for Consensus and Convergence in the Biomedical Research Debate
    Between the Species 12 (1): 7. 1996.
    Animal EthicsAnimal Experimentation
  •  114
    Rawls and the Distribution of Human Resources By Those in the Animal Rights Community
    International Journal of Applied Philosophy 28 (2): 251-266. 2014.
    Until now, arguments for the distribution of resources by those who care about the plight of human-used animals have been either utilitarian or libertarian in nature. The utilitarian case has been made in writing by both activists and philosophers. The libertarian case is more a position that I have found comes naturally to many in the animal movement. In this article I make use of elements of Rawls’ A Theory of Justice to make a case for two principles of justice for the distribution of human r…Read more
    Until now, arguments for the distribution of resources by those who care about the plight of human-used animals have been either utilitarian or libertarian in nature. The utilitarian case has been made in writing by both activists and philosophers. The libertarian case is more a position that I have found comes naturally to many in the animal movement. In this article I make use of elements of Rawls’ A Theory of Justice to make a case for two principles of justice for the distribution of human resources by those in the animal rights community. My argument arises within the tradition of Tom Regan and Marc Rowlands where animals are held to possess negative rights. This is an argument largely by analogy to Rawls’ manner of making a case for his two principles.
    Applied Ethics, MiscellaneousNormative EthicsSocial and Political Philosophy, MiscellaneousJusticeHi…Read more
    Applied Ethics, MiscellaneousNormative EthicsSocial and Political Philosophy, MiscellaneousJusticeHistory: RightsAnimal Rights
  •  271
    A Challenge to the Plausibility of a Fruitful Scientific Intentional Psychology
    Facta Philosophica 9 (1): 79-101. 2007.
    Philosophy, MiscPhilosophical TraditionsOther Academic AreasCognitive Psychology
  • Using the world to understand the mind: Evolutionary foundations for ecological psychology
    Journal of Mind and Behavior 29 (1-2): 139-157. 2008.
    In this paper I argue that when behaviorism began to wane and cognitivism became the more dominant framework in psychology, ecological psychology was also strongly suggested at two different levels. First, ecological psychology, considered in light of evolutionary theory, promised to handle three serious philosophical challenges to behaviorism. Second, this ecological approach promised to explain several anomalies in behavioral research. Ecological psychology, then, although largely overlooked, …Read more
    In this paper I argue that when behaviorism began to wane and cognitivism became the more dominant framework in psychology, ecological psychology was also strongly suggested at two different levels. First, ecological psychology, considered in light of evolutionary theory, promised to handle three serious philosophical challenges to behaviorism. Second, this ecological approach promised to explain several anomalies in behavioral research. Ecological psychology, then, although largely overlooked, was and still is a viable alternative to internalist frameworks — such as cognitivism — as a fruitful framework for studying behavior.
    Philosophical TraditionsPhilosophy, MiscPsychologyPhilosophy of Mind, MiscellaneousCognitivism in Ps…Read more
    Philosophical TraditionsPhilosophy, MiscPsychologyPhilosophy of Mind, MiscellaneousCognitivism in PsychologyCognitive Psychology, MiscEcological Approaches to PerceptionGestalt Theory
  •  199
    Biomedical Testing on Nonhuman Animals: An Attempt at a Rapprochement Between Utilitarianism and Theories of Inherent Value
    The Monist 79 (2): 230-246. 1996.
    In this paper I will argue that there is a way to reconcile the goals of two seemingly incompatible perspectives on the subject of research involving nonhuman animals: the utilitarian position and the inherent value position. The utilitarian holds that humans generally have a higher moral status than nonhumans. The rights theorist holds that the moral status of some nonhuman animals is equivalent to that of humans in virtue of their both possessing inherent value. These two positions are in oppo…Read more
    In this paper I will argue that there is a way to reconcile the goals of two seemingly incompatible perspectives on the subject of research involving nonhuman animals: the utilitarian position and the inherent value position. The utilitarian holds that humans generally have a higher moral status than nonhumans. The rights theorist holds that the moral status of some nonhuman animals is equivalent to that of humans in virtue of their both possessing inherent value. These two positions are in opposition because the former allows promising research on nonhuman animals where the latter prohibits such research.
    Animal Experimentation
  •  215
    Justification of Empirical Belief: Problems with Haack's Foundherentism
    Philosophy 72 (281): 460-463. 1997.
    Justification
  •  163
    Deeper problems for Noonan's probability argument against abortion: On a charitable reading of Noonan's conception criterion of humanity
    Bioethics 25 (5): 280-289. 2009.
    In ‘An Almost Absolute Value in History’ John T. Noonan criticizes several attempts to provide a criterion for when an entity deserves rights. These criteria, he argues are either arbitrary or lead to absurd consequence. Noonan proposes human conception as the criterion of rights, and justifies it by appeal to the sharp shift in probability, at conception, of becoming a being possessed of human reason. Conception, then, is when abortion becomes immoral.The article has an historical and a philoso…Read more
    In ‘An Almost Absolute Value in History’ John T. Noonan criticizes several attempts to provide a criterion for when an entity deserves rights. These criteria, he argues are either arbitrary or lead to absurd consequence. Noonan proposes human conception as the criterion of rights, and justifies it by appeal to the sharp shift in probability, at conception, of becoming a being possessed of human reason. Conception, then, is when abortion becomes immoral.The article has an historical and a philosophical goal. The historical goal is to carefully present the probability argument in a charitable manner. The philosophical goal is to offer a unique criticism of Noonan's probability argument against abortion. I argue that, even on a very charitable reading of Noonan's argument for the conception criterion, this criterion is also susceptible to charges of arbitrariness and absurdity. Noonan's claim that probability shifts have anything to do with the moral rights of fetuses cannot be made coherent. I also show that there are problems with Noonan's assumptions about moral rights and the potential to become a being possessed of human reason.
    Abortion
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