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34Good Knowledge, Bad Knowledge: On Two Dogmas of Epistemology-Stephen HetheringtonInternational Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1; ISSU 173): 107-107. 2004.
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92Review of Sumner, *Welfare, Happiness, and Ethics* (review)Philosophical Review 107 (2): 309. 1998.Despite being co-opted by economists and politicians for their own purposes, ‘welfare’ traditionally refers to well-being, and it is in this sense that L. W. Sumner understands the term. His book is a clear, careful, and well-crafted investigation into major theories of welfare, accompanied by a one-chapter defense of “welfarism,” the view that welfare is the only foundational value necessary for ethics. Sumner himself is attracted to utilitarianism, but he makes no commitment to it in this work…Read more
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38Intrinsic Value: Concept and WarrantPhilosophical Review 105 (2): 267. 1996.The notion that some things have intrinsic value, independently of whether they are valued or would be valued under certain conditions, is puzzling not only to noncognitivists and skeptics, but to theorists who understand value in terms of what would be accepted by rational preference, in a social contract, or under conditions of vivid imagination. Written in the tradition of Roderick Chisholm’s Brentano and Intrinsic Value, Noah Lemos’s Intrinsic Value: Concept and Warrant is unlikely to dimini…Read more
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44Good Knowledge, Bad Knowledge: On Two Dogmas of EpistemologyInternational Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1): 107-108. 2004.
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12Good Knowledge, Bad Knowledge: On Two Dogmas of Epistemology (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1): 107-108. 2004.
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11Value and Justification: The Foundations of Liberal TheoryPhilosophical Books 33 (1): 44-47. 1992.
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19Intrinsic Value (review)Philosophical Review 105 (2): 267-269. 1996.The notion that some things have intrinsic value, independently of whether they are valued or would be valued under certain conditions, is puzzling not only to noncognitivists and skeptics, but to theorists who understand value in terms of what would be accepted by rational preference, in a social contract, or under conditions of vivid imagination. Written in the tradition of Roderick Chisholm’s Brentano and Intrinsic Value, Noah Lemos’s Intrinsic Value: Concept and Warrant is unlikely to dimini…Read more
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Epistemology |
Metaphilosophy |
Meta-Ethics |
Normative Ethics |
Social and Political Philosophy |