•  347
    This chapter explores the relationship between classical utilitarianism and feminism in one period of utilitarianism's history. In Section 2.1, the main features of classical utilitarianism are identified and clarified. In Section 2.2, the main arguments of John Stuart Mill's _The Subjection of Women_ are analysed, making explicit their utilitarian basis. In Section 2.3, some criticisms of Mill's utilitarian feminism are examined and evaluated. This chapter's contention is that while utilitarian…Read more
  •  3
    William David Ross
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2010.
  •  174
    Introduction to Consenting Children
    In Lisa Forsberg, Isra Black & Anthony Skelton (eds.), Consenting Children: Autonomy, Responsibility, Well-Being, Proceedings of the British Academy. pp. 1-12. 2025.
    The purpose of the introduction to Consenting Children is to acquaint readers with the themes explored in the volume, to provide readers with a summary of the chapters comprising it, and to situate its contributions. Our ambition is for the volume’s contributions to lay the groundwork for future engagement in the legal and philosophical literature with the controversies raised by arguments about children’s autonomy, responsibility, and well-being, and the myriad interactions between them. We ant…Read more
  •  110
    Treating Adolescents Differently
    In Lisa Forsberg, Isra Black & Anthony Skelton (eds.), Consenting Children: Autonomy, Responsibility, Well-Being, Proceedings of the British Academy. pp. 205-228. 2025.
    In "Treating Adolescents Differently", Anthony Skelton, Isra Black, and Lisa Forsberg develop a well-being-based justification of the asymmetrical treatment of adolescent consent and refusal in the context of health-care to justify the differential and paternalistic treatment of adolescents more generally. The core of Skelton, Black, and Forsberg’s view is a variabilist theory of what is fundamentally and non-instrumentally prudentially good for adolescents, which includes the prudential value o…Read more
  •  218
    Griffin, James (1933-)
    In James E. Crimmins (ed.), Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Utilitarianism, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 186-188. 2013.
    Encyclopaedia entry on James's Griffin's moral and value theory.
  •  169
    Rashdall, Hastings (1858–1924)
    In James E. Crimmins (ed.), Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Utilitarianism, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 463-465. 2013.
    This is an opinionated encyclopaedia entry on Hastings Rashdall's ethical theory.
  •  141
    Consenting Children: Autonomy, Responsibility, Well-Being (edited book)
    Proceedings of the British Academy. 2025.
    Children are treated differently compared to adults in many domains, including in health care, education, employment, and criminal justice. The differential treatment of children—to adults, and in the case of younger children and adolescents, to each other—makes it both practically and theoretically important to examine the justification of when and why this treatment is permissible. Because the justifications of children’s differential treatment typically appeal to foundational normative consid…Read more
  •  1407
    Sidgwick's Ethics
    Cambridge University Press. 2025.
    Henry Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics is one of the most important and influential works in the history of moral philosophy. The Methods of Ethics clarifies and tackles some of the most enduring and difficult problems of morality. It offers readers a high-calibre example of analytical moral philosophy. This Element interprets and critically evaluates select positions and arguments in Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics. It focuses specifically on Sidgwick's moral epistemology, his argument against…Read more
  •  2140
    In both The Right and the Good and Foundations of Ethics, W. D. Ross maintains that any amount of the non-instrumental value of virtue outweighs any amount of the non-instrumental value of pleasure or avoidance of pain. The chapter raises two challenges to the status that Ross accords the value of virtue relative to the value of pleasure (pain). First, it argues that Ross fails to provide a good argument for thinking that virtue is always better than pleasure and that it is in any case implausi…Read more
  •  1372
    Sidgwick on Free Will and Ethics
    In Maximilian Kiener (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Responsibility, Routledge. pp. 82-94. 2023.
    In The Methods of Ethics, Henry Sidgwick maintains that resolution of the free will problem is of “limited” importance to ethics and to practical reasoning. Despite the view’s uniqueness, surprisingly little sustained attention has been paid to Sidgwick’s view. This chapter tries to remedy this situation. Part one clarifies Sidgwick’s argument for the claim that resolving the free will controversy is of only limited importance to ethics. Part two examines and tries to deflect objections to Sidgw…Read more
  •  1187
    Transformative Choice and Decision-Making Capacity
    Law Quarterly Review 139 (4): 654-680. 2023.
    This article is about the information relevant to decision-making capacity in refusal of life-prolonging medical treatment cases. We examine the degree to which the phenomenology of the options available to the agent—what the relevant states of affairs will feel like for them—forms part of the capacity-relevant information in the law of England and Wales, and how this informational basis varies across adolescent and adult medical treatment cases. We identify an important doctrinal phenomenon. In…Read more
  •  92
    Review of Dale Jamieson (Ed.), Singer and his Critics (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 79 (4). 2001.
    This is a review of Singer and His Critics edited by Dale Jamieson. It argues that the volume is important. The essay by Colin McGinn is heavily criticized.
  •  2
    Review of David Heyd (Ed.), Toleration: An Elusive Virtue (review)
    Philosophy in Review 18 (3): 180-182. 1998.
    A short review of Toleration: An Elusive Virtue in which some of the volume's contributions are criticised.
  •  146
    Review of R. M. Hare, Sorting out Ethics (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 79 (4): 583-585. 2001.
    This is a short review of R.M. Hare's Sorting Out Ethics. It critically evaluates Hare's universal prescriptivism.
  •  8
    Review of Shelly Kagan, Normative Ethics (review)
    Philosophy in Review 19 (5): 350-351. 1999.
  •  1084
    Review of David Phillips, Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. 2022.
    This is a review of David Phillips, Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics: A Guide. The book is a pellucid guide to Sidgwick's masterpiece which will benefit all who read it.
  •  770
    Children's Prudential Value
    In Christopher Wareham (ed.), The Cambridge Handbook of the Ethics of Ageing, Cambridge University Press. pp. 38-53. 2022.
    Until recently, the nature of children’s well-being or prudential value remained all but unexplored in the literature on well-being. There now exists a small but growing body of work on the topic. In this chapter, I focus on a cluster of under-explored issues relating to children’s well-being. I investigate, in specific, three distinct (and to my mind puzzling) positions about it, namely, that children’s lives cannot on the whole go well or poorly for them, prudentially speaking; that the prude…Read more
  •  1136
    Overriding Adolescent Refusals of Treatment
    Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 20 (3): 221-247. 2021.
    Adolescents are routinely treated differently to adults, even when they possess similar capacities. In this article, we explore the justification for one case of differential treatment of adolescents. We attempt to make philosophical sense of the concurrent consents doctrine in law: adolescents found to have decision-making capacity have the power to consent to—and thereby, all else being equal, permit—their own medical treatment, but they lack the power always to refuse treatment and so render …Read more
  •  1037
    Should we delay covid-19 vaccination in children?
    British Medical Journal 374 (8300): 96-97. 2021.
    The net benefit of vaccinating children is unclear, and vulnerable people worldwide should be prioritised instead, say Dominic Wilkinson, Ilora Finlay, and Andrew J Pollard. But Lisa Forsberg and Anthony Skelton argue that covid-19 vaccines have been approved for some children and that children should not be disadvantaged because of policy choices that impede global vaccination
  •  697
    Review of Anthony Appiah, Experiments in Ethics (review)
    Globe and Mail. 2008.
    A review of Anthony Appiah's Experiments in Ethics in which the book is praised.
  •  1664
    Mandating Vaccination
    In Meredith Celene Schwartz (ed.), The Ethics of Pandemics, Broadview Press. pp. 131-134. 2020.
    A short piece exploring some arguments for mandating vaccination for Covid-19.
  •  1330
    Sidgwick claimed Kant as one of his moral philosophical masters. This did not prevent Sidgwick from registering pointed criticisms of most of Kant’s main claims in ethics. This paper explores the practical ethics of Sidgwick and Kant. In § I, I outline the element of Kant’s theoretical ethics that Sidgwick endorsed. In §§ II and III, I outline and adjudicate some of their sharpest disagreements in practical ethics, on the permissibility of lying and on the demands of beneficence. In § IV, I argu…Read more
  •  1363
    Achievement and Enhancement
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 50 (3): 322-338. 2020.
    We engage with the nature and the value of achievement through a critical examination of an argument according to which biomedical “enhancement” of our capacities is impermissible because enhancing ourselves in this way would threaten our achievements. We call this the argument against enhancement from achievement. We assess three versions of it, each admitting to a strong or a weak reading. We argue that strong readings fail, and that weak readings, while in some cases successful in showing tha…Read more
  •  584
    Three Accounts of Cognitivist Internalism Undermined
    Dissertation, Dalhousie University. 1997.
    My MA thesis in which I defend externalism about moral motivation, the view that motivation to do what one believes one ought is external to one's belief.
  •  2243
    Bioethics in Canada, second edition (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2019.
    This is the second edition of the textbook Bioethics in Canada. It is the most up to date bioethics textbook on the Canadian market. Twenty-nine of its 54 contributions are by Canadians. All the chapters carried over from the first edition are revised in full (especially the chapters on obligations to the global poor, on medical assistance in dying, and on public health). It comprises *new* chapters on emerging genetic technologies and on indigenous peoples' health. It contains *new* case s…Read more
  •  1651
    Henry Sidgwick taught G.E. Moore as an undergraduate at the University of Cambridge. Moore found Sidgwick’s personality less than attractive and his lectures “rather dull”. Still, philosophically speaking, Moore absorbed a great deal from Sidgwick. In the Preface to the Trinity College Prize Fellowship dissertation that he submitted in 1898, just two years after graduation, he wrote “For my ethical views it will be obvious how much I owe to Prof. Sidgwick.” Later, in Principia Ethica, Moore …Read more
  •  1026
    Review of Robert Myers, Self-Governance and Cooperation (review)
    Utilitas 14 (1): 128-130. 2002.
    A critical review of Robert Myers Self-Governance and Cooperation
  •  627
    Review of Glenn McGee (Ed.), Pragmatic Bioethics (review)
    Philosophy in Review 20 (5): 365-367. 2000.
    Critical review of Glenn McGee, ed., Pragmatic Bioethics.