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41Two Views of Capitalist Stagnation: Underconsumption and Challenges to Capitalist ControlScience and Society 49 (3). 1985.
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35Phenomenalism: A Metaphysics of Chance and ExperiencePhilosophical Quarterly 74 (3): 1047-1049. 2024.
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52Projectivist utilitarianism and the satisfaction of desireErkenntnis 29 (3). 1988.N. M. L. Nathan's argument that IDP utilitarianism, if universally adopted, is inconsistent, does not succeed. The argument requires that if an IDP utilitarian has only self-regarding desires, then none of these desires can be informed. This rests on a partial misuse of the expression satisfaction of desire. For an individual attempting to realize his self-regarding desires, the satisfaction of the satisfaction of a desire is unmeaning. The naming of an object of the desire is an intrinsic part …Read more
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13Rational Powers in Action: Instrumental Rationality and Extended AgencyPhilosophical Quarterly 72 (1): 243-246. 2021.
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22The last two decades have seen Marxism's academic renascence. In fields as diverse as law, literary criticism, history, and philosophy, Marxism once again captivates no small number of scholars. In part, this reassessment is driven by the efforts of a group of philosophers and economists to reconstruct Marx from the ground up on a more rigorous basis. The work of these "Analytical Marxists" -- who include G.A. Cohen, Jon Elster, and John Roemer -- is given a sustained examination and critique in…Read more
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5The Limits of Government: An Essay on the Public Goods Argument (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 32 (1): 138-140. 1992.
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Socialism: What's left after the collapse of the soviet system?Social Research: An International Quarterly 60 471-492. 1993.
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24Can the Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes Be Appraised?New Scholasticism 58 (4): 483-485. 1984.
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25The Scottish Enlightenment, and the Theory of Spontaneous Order (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 29 (3): 357-359. 1989.
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21Does Theism Need Middle Knowledge?Religious Studies 25 (1). 1989.David Basinger, in ‘Middle Knowledge and Classical Christian Thought’, has claimed that whether the concept of God's middle knowledgeis coherent ‘cannot be dismissed lightly or ignored by those interested in classical Christian thought. For what is at stake is the very coherence of Christian theism itself’
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