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112Why Callicott’s Ecological Communitarianism Is Not HolisticJournal of Value Inquiry 42 (3): 389-396. 2008.
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128Evaluating Callicott's Attack on Stone's Moral PluralismEnvironmental Values 10 (3): 395-415. 2001.J. Baird Callicott is well known in environmental philosophy for his attack on Christopher D. Stone's moral pluralism. Although his attack has drawn attention from critics and has been labelled problematic for various reasons, I argue that it fails entirely. Each of Callicott's three distinct criticisms proves to be not only weak on its own terms, but, perhaps surprisingly, as effective against Callicott's own communitarian position as it is against Stone's pluralist one. I show that Callicott's…Read more
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117No such luckThe Philosophers' Magazine 55 (55): 82-86. 2011.People who suffer survivor’s guilt reason that, if they survived while others didn’t, then this must be because of the choices that they made, and that others did not make. People with survivor’s guilt feel just the way they would feel if they did not really believe in luck.
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80The Inadequacy of Callicott’s Ecological CommunitarianismEnvironmental Ethics 28 (4): 395-412. 2006.J. Baird Callicott defends a communitarian environmental ethic that grounds moral standing in shared kinship and community. This normative theory is unacceptable because it is out of synch with our considered moral judgments as environmental philosophers. Ecological communitarianism excludes in advance entities that would obviously qualify for moral standing, and scuttles itself in the process.
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330There Is No Door: Finally Solving the Problem of Moral LuckJournal of Philosophy 101 (9): 445-464. 2004.
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240Tossing the rotten thing out: Eliminating bad reasons not to solve the problem of moral luckPhilosophy 80 (4): 531-541. 2005.Solving the problem of moral luck—the problem of dealing with conflicting intuitions about whether moral blameworthiness varies with luck in cases of negligence—is like repairing a dented fender in front of two kinds of critic. The one keeps telling you that there is no dent, and the other sees the dent but keeps warning you that repairing it will do more harm than good. It is time to straighten things out. As I argue elsewhere, the solution to the problem of moral luck is finally revealed. Our …Read more
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204Keeping a Place for Metaethics: Assessing Elliot's Dismissal of the Subjectivism/objectivism Debate in Environmental EthicsMetaphilosophy 35 (5): 675-694. 2004.Robert Elliot claims that the metaethical distinction between subjectivism and objectivism is unimportant in environmental ethics. He argues that because a sufficiently sophisticated subjectivist can accommodate all the intrinsic value an objectivist can, even in apparently problematic situations where humans either do not exist or do not have the relevant values, and because metaethical commitments fail to have any normative or motivational impact on rational debate, it makes no difference whet…Read more
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Texas A&M UniversityRegular Faculty
College Station, Texas, United States of America