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6On Boxing: Critical Interventions in the Bittersweet Science: by Joseph D. Lewandowski, New York, NY, Routledge, 2021, 108 pp., $95 (hardcover) ISBN 9781032018898 (review)Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 51 (3): 575-580. 2024.
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72On Boxing: Critical Interventions in the Bittersweet ScienceJournal of the Philosophy of Sport 51 (3): 575-580. 2024.Volume 51, Issue 3, November 2024, Page 575-580.
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43A Confucian mutualist theory of sportJournal of the Philosophy of Sport 50 (2): 256-280. 2023.This article develops a novel theory of sport that I call ‘Confucian mutualism’. Confucian mutualism is underpinned by the Confucian Golden Rule and the Confucian conception of human dignity. It resembles the mutualist theory of sport developed by Robert L. Simon in maintaining that sport participants ethically ought to prioritize promoting sporting excellence both in themselves and in their co-participants. However, while Simon’s mutualism maintains that sporting excellence consists in proficie…Read more
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108A critical note on a purported disanalogy between cycling and mixed martial artsJournal of the Philosophy of Sport 49 (2): 177-194. 2022.Nicholas Dixon’s Kantian argument for why mixed martial arts (MMA) is intrinsically immoral has received several critical responses. We offer an additional critical response. Unlike previous responses, ours does not rely on an interpretation of the categorical imperative that Dixon would find tendentious. Instead, we grant that Dixon’s views about what makes other sports consistent with the categorical imperative are correct and argue from this assumption that MMA is also consistent with the cat…Read more
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154Saving the Last Person from Radical Scepticism: How to Justify Attributions of Intrinsic Value to Nature without Intuition or Empirical EvidenceEnvironmental Values 32 (1): 91-111. 2023.Toby Svoboda (2011, 2015) argues that humans cannot ever justifiably attribute intrinsic value to nature because we can never have evidence that any part of non-human nature has intrinsic value. We argue that, at best, Svoboda's position leaves us with uncertainty about whether there is intrinsic value in the non-human natural world. This uncertainty, however, together with reason to believe that at least some non-human natural entities would possess intrinsic value if anything does, leaves us i…Read more
Alexander Pho
University of The Frasier Valley
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University of The Frasier ValleyAssistant Professor
University of Wisconsin, Madison
PhD, 2024
Clinton, New York, United States of America