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112Kant’s Theory of Taste (review)The Owl of Minerva 36 (1): 43-51. 2004.Immanuel Kant’s Critique of the Power of Judgment has recently received an increasing amount of attention from philosophers interested in the development of German Idealism, and with the recent publication of a new translation of the Third Critique, this trend is not likely to change any time soon. It is for this reason that Henry Allison’s latest book, Kant’s Theory of Taste: A Reading of the Critique of Aesthetic Judgment, comes at such an opportune time.
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125Ethics and selfhood: Alterity and the phenomenology of obligation (review)Husserl Studies 21 (3): 241-248. 2005.
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33Kant's Ethics and the Same-Sex Marriage Debate - An IntroductionImprint: Springer. 2017.This book defends the thesis that Kant's normative ethics and his practical ethics of sex and marriage can be valuable resources for people engaged in the contemporary debate over same-sex marriage. It does so by first developing a reading of Kant's normative ethics that explains the way in which Kant's notions of human moral imperfection unsocial sociability inform his ethical thinking. The book then offers a systematic treatment of Kant's views of sex and marriage, arguing that Kant's views ar…Read more
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124Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 46 (1): 129-130. 2006.
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86Understanding Phenomenal Consciousness (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 45 (2): 277-278. 2005.
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209Kant on the Emotion of LoveEuropean Journal of Philosophy 24 (3): 580-606. 2016.Although recent Kant scholarship has focused on Kant's treatment of various emotions, one that has not received much attention is love. There are three main reasons for this. First, Kant does not have a single, sustained analysis of the emotion of love; what he does say appears scattered throughout his corpus. Second, Kant identifies a number of different kinds of love, and it is not always clear which kinds are emotions or how the different kinds of love are related. Finally, in general Kant is…Read more
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195Freedom and the source of value: Korsgaard and wood on Kant's formula of humanityMetaphilosophy 42 (4): 353-359. 2011.This essay examines two interpretations of Kant's argument for the formula of humanity. Christine M. Korsgaard defends a constructivist reading of Kant's argument, maintaining that humans must view themselves as having absolute value because their power for rational choice confers value on their ends. Allen Wood, however, defends a realist interpretation of Kant's argument, maintaining that humans actually are absolutely valuable and that their choices do not confer value but rather reflect thei…Read more
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253Same-Sex Marriage, ‘Homosexual Desire,’ and the Capacity to LoveInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy 25 (2): 171-186. 2011.The issue of same-sex marriage continues to be controversial in the United States. Opponents of same-sex marriage offer a variety of objections in defense of their position. One such objection (which I identify as the Inability to Love objection, or ILO) is that legalizing same-sex marriage would promote a counterfeit good (homosexual marriage) as a genuine good (heterosexual marriage), since homosexuals are incapable of genuine, full erotic love. Proponents of ILO argue that homosexuals are inc…Read more
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132Is the Same‐sex Marriage Debate Really Just about Marriage?Journal of Applied Philosophy 186-203. 2018.In What is Marriage? One Man and One Woman: A Defense, Sherif Girgis, Ryan Anderson and Robert George defend the ‘conjugal marriage’ while claiming to make no moral judgments about homosexuality. My contention in this article is that the argument of What is Marriage is not sufficiently different from the arguments of classical new natural law theorists, and, therefore, What is Marriage does not remain neutral on the question of whether homosexuality is moral. First, I give an overview of some cl…Read more
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192Th e Role of Feelings in Husserl’s EthicsIdealistic Studies 39 (1-3): 11-22. 2009.Though Husserl tends to receive less attention than other phenomenologists, there is growing interest in his ethics. Proponents of Husserl’s ethics argue that his moral philosophy is not merely of historical interest; Husserl, they claim, can contribute positively to contemporary debates in ethics, specifically debates about the role of feelings in moral agency. This paper raises questions about this last claim. I argue that, on the one hand, Husserl’s moral psychology proves superior to some of…Read more
Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |