University of Texas at Austin
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1981
Tempe, Arizona, United States of America
  •  1
    Sharing Responsibility by Larry May (review)
    Ethics 104 (4): 890-893. 1994.
  •  14
    Letters to the Editor
    with Anthony Weston, Bernard P. Dauenhauer, and Konstantin Kolenda
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 60 (1). 1986.
  •  14
    Expecting Common Decency
    Philosophy of Education 58 25-35. 2002.
  •  123
    On Being Content with Imperfection
    Ethics 127 (2): 327-352. 2017.
    The aim of this essay is to work out an account of contentment as a response to imperfect conditions and to argue that a disposition to contentment, understood as a disposition to appreciate the goods in one's present condition and to use expectations that enable such appreciation, is a virtue. In the first half, I lay out an analysis of what contentment and discontentment are. In the second half, I argue that contentment is a virtue of appreciation and respond to skeptical concerns about recomm…Read more
  •  98
    XI—Responsibilities and Taking on Responsibility
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 119 (3): 231-251. 2019.
    There is a familiar, everyday notion of a responsibility. Much of daily life on and off the job is consumed by taking care of responsibilities in this sense. But what is a responsibility, and how are responsibilities related to obligations? Reflection on the phenomenon of taking on responsibilities suggests that the concept of ‘a responsibility’ is distinct from that of ‘an obligation’, and that not all responsibilities are also obligations, even though many are.
  •  5
    Review of: Concepts of Health and Disease: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (review)
    Theoretical Medicine: An International Journal for the Philosophy and Methodology of Medical Research and Practice 4 329-332. 1983.
    Last updated - 2020-01-06.
  •  44
    A Question of Obligation
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 37 (1): 44-50. 2020.
    This essay engages with Sarah Buss's 2019 annual lecture for the Society for Applied Philosophy: "Some Musings About the Limits of an Ethics That Can Be Applied – A Response to a Question About Courage and Convictions That Confronted the Author When She Woke Up on November 9, 2016." She reflects on whether one is obligated to take great risks in the face of grave injustice. I suggest shifting the normative question from “Am I obligated?” to “Is there something of moral importance that someone ne…Read more
  •  45
    Review of Claudia Card: Lesbian Choices. (review)
    Ethics 106 (4): 862-864. 1995.
  •  93
    The Undergraduate Pipeline Problem
    Hypatia 24 (2). 2009.
    The essay speculates that women's underrepresentation in the philosophy major (though not in lower division philosophy courses) is connected with the clash between the schema for philosophy and the schema for woman. The result is that female students have difficulty envisioning themselves as philosophers and thus have a weaker attachment to the discipline. I also suggest that this schema clash encourages female students to take isolated experiences of sexism or gender imbalance in the classro…Read more
  •  51
    Doing Valuable Time considers the interest--and disinterest--we take in our own lives. It explores the nature of meaningful living, the attraction to the future that is lost in depression, the motivating force of hope, the role of commitments, the inevitability of boredom, and the possibilities for contentment with imperfection.
  •  46
    Impossible Dreams: Rationality, Integrity, and Moral Imagination (review)
    Philosophical Review 107 (1): 125. 1998.
    Systemic discrimination produces individuals with a degraded self-concept who therefore may not care about autonomy or set ends compatible with human flourishing. Under systemic discrimination, the dominant conceptual and evaluative framework does not enable the oppressed to articulate their humanity or the rationality of aspiring to full human flourishing. And the injustice of that system may be fully visible only from a perspective outside of that system.
  •  65
    Moral Repair (review)
    Dialogue 46 (4): 819-823. 2007.
    This is a review of Margaret Urban Walker's book, Moral Repair: Reconstructing Moral Relations (Cambridge University Press, 2002).
  •  1
    Civilized Oppression (review)
    Dialogue 40 (4): 845-847. 2001.
    Lynching, arbitrary imprisonment, and police brutality are uncivilized forms of oppression that cause obvious, measurable harms. Exercised through physical violence or unjust legal action, uncivilized oppression expresses ill will toward vulnerable individuals and blatantly misuses power. Civilized oppression, by contrast, takes place in routine, socially accepted institutional and intimate relationships between people. Civilized oppression may cause no obvious harms, may be motivated by good in…Read more
  •  37
    Review of Linda Radzik, Making Amends: Atonement in Morality, Law, and Politics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (8). 2009.
  •  21
    Lesbian philosophy
    In Kittay Eva Feder & Martín Alcoff Linda (eds.), The Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy, Wiley-blackwell. 2006.
    This chapter contains section titled: Relation to Philosophy Lesbian Philosophies of Liberation Heterosexuality and Lesbianism. Ethics and Politics Essentialisms and Anti—Essentialisms The Future of Lesbian Philosophy Bibliography.
  •  82
    How has feminism failed lesbianism? What issues belong at the top of a lesbian and gay political agenda? This book answers both questions by examining what lesbian and gay subordination really amounts to. Calhoun argues that lesbians and gays aren't just socially and politically disadvantaged. The closet displaces lesbians and gays from visible citizenship, and both law and cultural norms deny lesbians and gay men a private sphere of romance, marriage, and the family.
  •  167
    Thinking about the Plurality of Genders
    Hypatia 16 (2): 67-74. 2001.
    Linda Nicholson argues that because gender is socially constructed, feminist theorizing must be about an expansive multiplicity of subjects called “woman” that bear a family resemblance to each other. But why did feminism expand its category of analysis to apply to all cultures and time periods when social constructionism led lesbian and gay studies to narrow the categories “homosexual” and “lesbian”? And given the multiplicity of genders, why insist that feminist subjects are different, resembl…Read more
  •  7
    Sex and Ethics (review)
    Social Theory and Practice 34 (4): 635-639. 2008.
  •  408
    Justice, care, gender bias
    Journal of Philosophy 85 (9): 451-463. 1988.
    I address the question of gender bias in ethical theorizing, in particular the claim that an "ethics of justice" is gender biased because it cannot logically accommodate an "ethics of care." I argue against the strong claim that an ethics of justice and an ethics of care are incompatible but suggest that theorizing that crystallizes into a tradition has non-logical as well as logical implications. In order to explain why ethical theorizing has focused on some content and neglected others, one wo…Read more
  •  226
    Changing one's heart
    Ethics 103 (1): 76-96. 1992.
    Good reasons to forgive typically divorce act from agent so that there is nothing in the agent to be forgiven. Forgiving on the basis of good reasons that show the wrongdoer deserves forgiveness is thus minimalist because nonelective. Genuine, or aspirational, forgiveness requires forgiving agents for unexcused, unjustified, and unrepented wrongdoing. The primary obstacle to aspirational forgiveness is that we cannot make sense of persons choosing evil. This essay suggests a way of rendering the…Read more
  •  265
    What good is commitment?
    Ethics 119 (4): 613-641. 2009.
    Deeply embedded in popular cultural portrayals of admirable lives, in everyday conceptions of maturity, and in philosophical work in ethics and political philosophy is the idea that people not only will, but ought to, make commitments and that it is good for the individual herself to do so. In part one I briefly raise skeptical doubts about the defensibility of the normative pressure to commit, and suggest that commitment may only be one style of managing one’s diachronic existence. In part two …Read more