• Being there: Review symposium
    Metascience 7 78-83. 1998.
  •  142
    All Play and No Work? AI and Existential Unemployment
    The Journal of Ethics 29 (4): 747-771. 2025.
    Recent developments in large language models and image generation software raise the possibility that AI systems might one day replace humans in some of the intrinsically valuable work through which humans find meaning in their lives – work like scientific and philosophical research and the creation of art. If AIs can do this work more efficiently than humans, this might make human performance of these activities pointless. This represents a threat to human wellbeing which is distinct from, and …Read more
  •  59
    Totalism, Animals, and the Repugnant Conclusion
    Utilitas 36 (3): 211-229. 2024.
    Totalism states that one population is better than another iff it has higher total welfare. One counterintuitive consequence is the Repugnant Conclusion (RC). Totalism also entails that a very large population of animals with lives barely worth living is better than a smaller population of happier humans. Furthermore, the strategies that have been used to avoid the troubling normative implications of the RC do not work in the animal case, so we may have reason to bring about such a population. I…Read more
  •  166
    The Case for Animal-Inclusive Longtermism
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 22 (3-04): 336-359. 2024.
    Longtermism is the view that positively influencing the long-term future is one of the key moral priorities of our time. Longtermists generally focus on humans, and neglect animals. This is a mistake. In this paper I will show that the basic argument for longtermism applies to animals at least as well as it does to humans, and that the reasons longtermists have given for ignoring animals do not withstand scrutiny. Because of their numbers, their capacity for suffering, and our ability to influen…Read more
  •  120
    The Definition of Consequentialism: A Survey
    Utilitas 34 (4): 368-385. 2022.
    There are different meanings associated with consequentialism and teleology. This causes confusion, and sometimes results in discussions based on misunderstandings rather than on substantial disagreements. To clarify this, we created a survey on the definitions of ‘consequentialism’ and ‘teleology’, which we sent to specialists in consequentialism. We broke down the different meanings of consequentialism and teleology into four component parts: Outcome-Dependence, Value-Dependence, Maximization,…Read more
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    This issue brings together papers by Australasian philosophers on language, thought, and their relationship. Contributors were given complete freedom to treat these topics in any way they saw fit. The results reflect the diverse interests of Australasian philosophers, and, perhaps even more strikingly, the diversity of philosophical methods they employ to pursue these interests.
  •  84
    Chris Mortensen, Graham Nerlich, Garrett Cullity and Gerard O'Brien.
  •  1
    Sustainability: Business strategy trumps reputation
    Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility. forthcoming.
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