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92Virtue Lost: Courage in SportJournal of the Philosophy of Sport 23 (1): 45-57. 1996.No abstract.
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99Penal Substitutionism, Divine Justice, and the Existence of GodPhilosophy and Theology 33 (1): 69-93. 2021.Professor William Lane Craig argues that a particular set of concerns about the Christian doctrine of penal substitution (namely, that Jesus of Nazareth was sacrificed for the sins of humanity) can be satisfied. This article provides rebuttals to said replies in an attempt to render plausible the claim that God exists to the extent that God is perfectly just, and that divine justice requires, among other things, that God never engage in the harming of innocents, consistent with any doctrine of r…Read more
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1Foundations of a Kantian Theory of PunishmentSouthern Journal of Philosophy 31 (3): 263-283. 2010.It has recently been argued that there is probably no theory of punishment to be found in Immanuel Kant's writings, but that “if one selects carefully among the many remarks and insights that Kant has left us about crime and punishment, one might even be able to build such an edifice from the bricks provided.”1 In this paper, I seek to provide part of a foundation of a Kantian theory of punishment, one which is consistent with many, if not all, of Kant's own insights on justice. Finally, I asses…Read more
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2The Right to Civil Disobedience and the Right to SecedeSouthern Journal of Philosophy 30 (1): 19-28. 2010.
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7Race, Ethnicity, and Public PolicyIn Jorge J. E. Gracia (ed.), Race or Ethnicity?: On Black and Latino Identity, Cornell University Press. pp. 225-247. 2019.
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32A Kantian–Marxian–Rawlsian Critique of Open Borders Approaches to US Immigration PolicyIn Deborah C. Poff (ed.), Diversity and Discrimination in Business Ethics, Higher Education and Society, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 65-84. 2025.This chapter presents a Kantian–Marxian–Rawlsian critique of open borders approaches to US immigration policy insofar as they argue that such approaches are vulnerable to the objection that it inadvertently uses new immigrants as mere means to the ends, as Immanuel Kant might put it, of capitalist profits by way of stagnated working class wages due to the ongoing increased “surplus army” of workers, while at the same time, as Karl Marx might add, alienating such underemployed and unemployed US b…Read more
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11Immigration and Business EthicsIn Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos (eds.), Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 1111-1116. 2021.
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17Social Construction of BusinessesIn Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos (eds.), Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 1653-1661. 2021.
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13Economics and Business of War and Responsibility for Unjust WarsIn Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos (eds.), Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 601-605. 2021.
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13Epistemic Responsibility1International Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 (2): 179-200. 2008.Given the hundreds of articles and books that have been written in epistemology over the span of just the past few decades, relatively little has been written specifically on epistemic responsibility. What has been written rarely considers the nature of epistemic responsibility and its possible role in epistemic justification or knowledge. Instead, such work concerns philosophical analyses and arguments about related concepts such as epistemic virtues or duties, rather than epistemic praiseworth…Read more
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16IntroductionIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-13. 2018.In my book, Interpreting Plato’s Dialogues, I provide a critical assessment of numerous arguments proffered by Julia Annas, Terence Irwin, Richard Kraut and some others in favor of the philosophically prominent Mouthpiece Interpretation of Plato’s dialogues (also referred to by some as the “dogmatic” approach to Plato’s dialogues) according to which it is justified to ascribe to Plato some or all of the informational contents of what this or that character in Plato’s dialogues states beyond mere…Read more
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40Interpreting Plato SocraticallyIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 15-32. 2018.This chapter provides a taxonomy of approaches to the Platonic Question and articulates the Socratic Anti-MouthpieceSocratic (Anti-Mouthpiece) Interpretation InterpretationMouthpiece interpretation of Plato’s dialogues. It then provides in-depth criticisms of the Mouthpiece Interpretation of Plato’s dialogues, exposing various logical errors employed by its supporters. It also seeks to differentiate the Socratic Anti-Mouthpiece Interpretation from other anti-mouthpiece approaches, clarifying tha…Read more
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15Socrates and Compensatory JusticeIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 187-197. 2018.It appears that the vast philosophical literature on Plato and Socrates has produced nothing of substance on the topic of compensatory justice. This chapter sets forth what Plato’s Socrates says about compensatory justice, and it would appear that what Socrates articulates is rather generally consistent with contemporary U.S. law on the matter. Virtue ethicists seemed to have ignored such facts present in the Platonic corpus.
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21In Defense of Socratic StudiesIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 97-119. 2018.This chapter defines and critically discusses “The Socratic Question,” which asks whether or not it is justified to attribute to either the historical Socrates or Plato’s Socrates any proposition of philosophical substance found in Plato’s dialogues. It discusses the Socratic Question largely in the context of the discussion found in Thomas C. BrickhouseBrickhouse, T.C. and Nicholas D. SmithSmith, N.D., Socratic Moral Psychology. In the end, it is argued that just as many philosophers commit the…Read more
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27The Socratic Roots of RetributivismIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 169-186. 2018.What appears to be the accepted view by most philosophers on Plato and punishmentPunishment is that Plato was a moral educationMoral education theorist about punishment. This chapter examines and exposes this view to be incorrect and poorly established by way of the informational contents of the Platonic corpus. Given the plausibility of the Socratic (Anti-MouthpieceSocratic (Anti-Mouthpiece) Interpretation) Interpretation, what the Platonic corpus tells us is nothing at all about Plato’s theory…Read more
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21Socrates and Distributive JusticeIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 121-132. 2018.This chapter explicates many of the words of Plato’s Socrates on the problem of distributive justice. One of the main points of this chapter is to demonstrate how the Socratic Anti-MouthpieceSocratic (Anti-Mouthpiece) Interpretation Interpretation can and ought to function when it interprets the words placed in Socrates’ mouth by Plato. One of the leading contemporary philosophers of Plato, Richard KrautKraut, R., argues that Plato has a theory of distributive justice. However, while this chapte…Read more
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33Legal Obligation in Plato’s CritoIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 133-168. 2018.This chapter explicates Plato’s Socrates’ words pertaining to the alleged moral obligation to obey the law. It provides a novel interpretation of the meaning of Socrates’ words. For Socrates, he has no moral obligation to obey the Laws of Athens in that he has been unjustly convicted of atheism and corruption of (some of) the Athenian youth by teaching some of them philosophy. Since he was not an atheist and since he had not genuinely corrupted the youth, Socrates, when presented with the coerci…Read more
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27Defending the Socratic Interpretation of Plato’s DialoguesIn Interpreting Plato Socratically: Socrates and Justice, Springer Verlag. pp. 33-95. 2018.This chapter provides an in-depth set of replies to several objections that either have been raised or might be raised to the Socratic Anti-MouthpieceSocratic (Anti-Mouthpiece) Interpretation InterpretationMouthpiece interpretation of Plato’s dialogues. It is the goal of this chapter to defend the Socratic Anti-Mouthpiece Interpretation as the most plausible approach to Plato’s dialogues because it is the least problematic and because there are no discernible objections to it that render it impl…Read more
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65Letters to the EditorProceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 79 (5). 2006.
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47John Rawls’ Theory of Intergenerational JusticeIn Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos (eds.), Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 1183-1185. 2021.
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28Compensatory Justice to GroupsIn Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos (eds.), Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 368-372. 2021.
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54Affirmative Action in BusinessIn Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos (eds.), Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 44-48. 2021.
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39Racial and Ethnic Diversity in BusinessIn Deborah C. Poff & Alex C. Michalos (eds.), Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 1529-1534. 2021.
Areas of Specialization
| Legal Authority and Obligation |
| Law and Language |
| Philosophy of Law, Miscellaneous |