New York University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2012
CV
Gwanak-gu, Seoul, Korea (Republic of)
Areas of Specialization
Value Theory
Areas of Interest
Value Theory
  •  87
    Is luxury tax justifiable?
    Economics and Philosophy 39 (3): 446-467. 2023.
    This paper examines whether, and if so when, luxury tax is justifiable. After a characterization of luxury tax, I critically examine several arguments that have been or can be made in defence of luxury tax, including Ng’s diamond good argument and a variation of Frank’s positional good argument. I put forward an alternative, expressive argument, according to which luxury tax can help to create and sustain social norms that discourage conspicuous luxury consumption and display of wealth. I explai…Read more
  •  126
    An extension of rawls's theory of justice for climate change
    International Theory 11 (2): 160-181. 2019.
    In this paper, I argue that a new principle of background justice should be added to Rawls’s Law of Peoples because climate change is an international and intergenerational problem that can destabilize the Society of Peoples and the well-ordered peoples therein. I start with explaining the nature of my project and Rawls’s conception of stability. I argue that climate change poses a realistic threat to the stability of climate-vulnerable liberal peoples and as a result undermines international pe…Read more
  •  83
  •  198
    The uncomfortable truth about wrongful life cases
    Philosophical Studies 164 (3): 623-641. 2013.
    Our ambivalent attitudes toward the notion of ‘a life worth living’ present a philosophical puzzle: Why are we of two minds about the birth of a severely disabled child? Is the child’s life worth living or not worth living? Between these two apparently incompatible evaluative judgments, which is true? If one judgment is true and the other false, what makes us continue to find both evaluations appealing? Indeed, how can we manage to hold these inconsistent judgments simultaneously at all? I criti…Read more
  •  137
    A Stability Interpretation of Rawls’s The Law of Peoples
    Political Theory 43 (4): 473-499. 2015.
    In this essay, I propose an interpretation of John Rawls’s The Law of Peoples that puts the stability of liberal societies as the central organizing idea of its principles. I start by critically examining other interpretations currently found in the literature. I observe two characteristics of Rawls’s conception of stability from his political turn: stability for the right reasons and in the right way. In the main body of the essay, I argue that the absence of a global egalitarian principle is c…Read more