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Andrew Altman

Georgia State University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    45
    • Most Recent
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    12

 More details
  • Georgia State University
    Department of Philosophy
    Retired faculty
Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Law
Social and Political Philosophy
19th Century Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
  • All publications (45)
  •  1
    10. Ajume H. Wingo, Veil Politics in Liberal Democratic States Ajume H. Wingo, Veil Politics in Liberal Democratic States (pp. 367-371) (review)
    with J. David Velleman, Jeanette Kennett, Christopher Heath Wellman, Mitchell N. Berman, and Ben Bradley
    Ethics 118 (2). 2008.
    Value TheorySocial and Political Philosophy
  •  9
    Meaning, Truth and Evidence
    with Michael Bradie
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 18 (2): 113-122. 2010.
  • Speech Codes and Expressive Harm
    In Hugh LaFollette (ed.), Ethics in practice: an anthology, Wiley. 2014.
    Race and EthnicityFreedom of SpeechHarm in Applied Ethics
  •  328
    Breathing life into a dead argument: G.e. Moore and the open question (review)
    Philosophical Studies 117 (3): 395-408. 2004.
    A century after its publication, G.E. Moore''sPrincipia Ethica stands as one of theclassic statements of anti-naturalism inethics. Moore claimed that the most basic ethicalproperties were denoted by `good'' and `bad'' andthat all naturalist accounts of thoseproperties were inadequate. His open-questionargument aimed to refute any proposedidentification of good with some naturalproperty, and Moore concluded from theargument that good must be a nonnaturalproperty.The received view is that the open…Read more
    A century after its publication, G.E. Moore''sPrincipia Ethica stands as one of theclassic statements of anti-naturalism inethics. Moore claimed that the most basic ethicalproperties were denoted by `good'' and `bad'' andthat all naturalist accounts of thoseproperties were inadequate. His open-questionargument aimed to refute any proposedidentification of good with some naturalproperty, and Moore concluded from theargument that good must be a nonnaturalproperty.The received view is that the open-questionargument is a failure. In this paper,my aim is to breathe some life back intoMoore''s argument. My plan for doing so beginsby presenting the standard interpretation ofthe argument and then showing that there isan alternative to that interpretation. Thealternative is not developed at any length byMoore and stands in need of some elaboration. Isuggest a way of elaborating theargument and then show that the standardcriticisms of Moore fail to undermine thisalternative version of the open-questionargument.
    G. E. MooreThe Open Question Argument
  •  161
    Legal entrapment
    with Steven Lee
    Philosophy and Public Affairs 12 (1): 51-69. 1983.
    Criminal Justice EthicsCriminal Law, MiscDefenses in Criminal Law
  •  62
    Referees for Volume 7
    with Michael Barnhart, Avner Baz, David Benatar, Yitzhak Benbaji, Talia Bettcher, Brian Bix, Jeffrey Bland-Ballard, and Lene Bomann-Larsen
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 7 (4): 541-542. 2010.
    Value TheorySocial and Political Philosophy
  •  74
    Targeted Killings: Law and Morality in an Asymmetrical World
    with Claire Finkelstein and Jens David Ohlin
    Oxford University Press. 2012.
    The controversy surrounding targeted killings represents a crisis of conscience for policymakers, lawyers, philosophers and leading military experts grappling with the moral and legal limits of the war on terror. The book examines the legal and philosophical issues raised by government efforts to target suspected terrorists without giving them the safeguards of a fair trial.
    Military Ethics
  •  107
    A liberal theory of international justice
    with Christopher Heath Wellman
    Oxford University Press. 2009.
    This book advances a novel theory of international justice that combines the orthodox liberal notion that the lives of individuals are what ultimately matter morally with the putatively antiliberal idea of an irreducibly collective right of self-governance. The individual and her rights are placed at center stage insofar as political states are judged legitimate if they adequately protect the human rights of their constituents and respect the rights of all others. Yet, the book argues that legit…Read more
    This book advances a novel theory of international justice that combines the orthodox liberal notion that the lives of individuals are what ultimately matter morally with the putatively antiliberal idea of an irreducibly collective right of self-governance. The individual and her rights are placed at center stage insofar as political states are judged legitimate if they adequately protect the human rights of their constituents and respect the rights of all others. Yet, the book argues that legitimate states have a moral right to self-determination and that this right is inherently collective, irreducible to the individual rights of the persons who constitute them. Exploring the implications of these ideas, the book addresses issues pertaining to democracy, secession, international criminal law, armed intervention, political assassination, global distributive justice, and immigration. A number of the positions taken in the book run against the grain of current academic opinion: there is no human right to democracy; separatist groups can be morally entitled to secede from legitimate states; the fact that it is a matter of brute luck whether one is born in a wealthy state or a poorer one does not mean that economic inequalities across states must be minimized or even kept within certain limits; most existing states have no right against armed intervention; and it is morally permissible for a legitimate state to exclude all would-be immigrants.
    Global JusticeInternational Justice
  •  71
    Abortion and the indigent
    Journal of Social Philosophy 11 (1): 5-9. 1980.
    Abortion
  •  83
    On doing without events
    with Michael Bradie and Fred D. Miller
    Philosophical Studies 36 (3): 301-307. 1979.
    Events
  •  127
    Meaning, truth and evidence
    with Michael Bradie
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 18 (2): 113-122. 1980.
    Meaning
  •  129
    John Dewey and contemporary normative ethics
    Metaphilosophy 13 (2). 1982.
    John Dewey
  •  199
    Review of Mari J. Matsuda: Words That Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive Speech, and the First Amendment. (review)
    Ethics 106 (1): 211-213. 1995.
    Value TheoryCritical Race Theory
  •  95
    Buchanan, Allen. Human Rights, Legitimacy, and the Use of Force.Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010. Pp. 332. $74.00 (cloth) (review)
    Ethics 121 (3): 647-651. 2009.
    Value TheoryHuman Rights
  •  52
    Targeted Killing: A Legal and Political History, Markus Gunneflo, 290 pp., $110 cloth
    Ethics and International Affairs 31 (1): 103-105. 2017.
    Political Ethics
  •  126
    The Persistent Fiction of Harm to Humanity
    Ethics and International Affairs 20 (3): 367-372. 2006.
    Political Ethics
  •  201
    Making Sense of Sexual Harassment Law
    Philosophy and Public Affairs 25 (1): 36-50. 1996.
    Sexual Harassment
  • Justice: Critical Legal Theory: No Dogs or Philosophers Allowed
    with Ken Knisely, Mark Tushnet, and Jude Dougherty
    DVD. forthcoming.
    What makes the law the Law? Are the rules set by society based on immutable truths and forms of nature, or are they more like an evolving draft of guidelines for human conduct? Is the law the product of disinterested reason, or do the critical legal theorists have a point when they trace the shape of the law to the centers of power in our society? With Mark Tushnet, Andy Altman, and Jude Dougherty
  •  135
    Arguing about Law: An Introduction to Legal Philosophy
    Cengage Learning. 2001.
    Using the rule of law as its main theme, this text shows how abstract questions and concepts of legal philosophy are connected to concrete legal, political, and social issues. The text addresses several modern controversies and challenges students to consider both sides of an argument, using sound, reasoned thinking.
    Philosophy of EconomicsEconomics and Ethics, Misc
  •  164
    Critical Legal Studies: A Liberal Critique (edited book)
    Princeton University Press. 1990.
    In this first book-length liberal reply to CLS, Andrew Altman systematically examines the philosophical underpinnings of the CLS movement and exposes the deficiencies in the major lines of the CLS argument against liberalism.
    LiberalismNormative Approaches to Legal Reasoning
  •  683
    The Right to Get Turned On: Pornography, Autonomy, Equality
    In Andrew I. Cohen & Christopher Heath Wellman (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Applied Ethics, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 22--307. 2014.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  182
    Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account
    Philosophical Review 122 (1): 129-131. 2013.
    Global Justice
  •  276
    Discrimination
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2020.
    discrimination.
    Ethics
  •  275
    Joseph Raz, Value, Respect, and Attachment, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2001, pp. vi + 178
    Utilitas 15 (3): 376. 2003.
    Incommensurability of ValueTheories of Moral Value
  •  111
    Rawls' pragmatic turn
    Journal of Social Philosophy 14 (3): 8-12. 1983.
    John RawlsSocial and Political Philosophy, MiscellaneousPolitical TheoryLiberalism
  •  152
    Religion, taxes, and sex discrimination
    Legal Theory 11 (2): 125-142. 2005.
    Modern liberalism developed out of the strife of post-Reformation religious warfare. Among liberalism's central ideas were those of the individual's right of religious liberty and the separate jurisdictions of secular and religious authority. In societies that accepted these ideas and put them into institutional practice, levels of systemic religious violence were dramatically diminished. Moreover, the liberal principles that helped to build and sustain civil peace could make a strong claim to p…Read more
    Modern liberalism developed out of the strife of post-Reformation religious warfare. Among liberalism's central ideas were those of the individual's right of religious liberty and the separate jurisdictions of secular and religious authority. In societies that accepted these ideas and put them into institutional practice, levels of systemic religious violence were dramatically diminished. Moreover, the liberal principles that helped to build and sustain civil peace could make a strong claim to providing a just framework for addressing religious differences. Yet important normative questions have remained about the policies a liberal state should adopt toward religion.
    Areas of LawLegal RightsEthics
  •  216
    Genocide and crimes against humanity: Dispelling the conceptual fog
    Social Philosophy and Policy 29 (1): 280-308. 2012.
    Research Articles Andrew Altman, Social Philosophy and Policy, FirstView Article.
    GenocideWar Crimes
  •  5
    Discrimination Debated: A review of Deborah Hellman and Sophia Moreau, Philosophical Foundations of Discrimination Law (review)
    Jurisprudence 6 (1): 156-168. 2015.
    Areas of LawLegal Rights
  •  62
    Norman Geras: Crimes Against Humanity: Birth of a Concept: Manchester University Press, Manchester, 2011, 162 pp, £47.17, ISBN 978-0-7190-8241-2
    Criminal Law and Philosophy 10 (1): 205-214. 2016.
    International LawCriminal Law, Misc
  •  353
    From humanitarian intervention to assassination: Human rights and political violence
    with Christopher Heath Wellman
    Ethics 118 (2): 228-257. 2008.
    Purpose of WarConduct of WarEthics and Justification of WarHuman RightsJust War Theory
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