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Jessica Spector

The Academy
Yale University
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  • Yale University
    Yale College
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Areas of Specialization
Value Theory
Personal Identity and Values
History: Persons
Practical Identity
Philosophy of Food and Drink, Miscellaneous
Social Conceptions of Sex
Human Beings
The Self
Theories of Personal Identity
Philosophy of Sexuality
5 more
Areas of Interest
Value Theory
Arts and Humanities
History of Western Philosophy
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Personal Identity and Values
Philosophy of Food and Drink, Miscellaneous
Social Conceptions of Sex
2 more
  • All publications (7)
  •  16
    Index
    with Vednita Carter, Evelina Giobbe, Christine Stark, Carole Pateman, Catharine MacKinnon, Margaret A. Baldwin, Norma Jean Almodovar, Martha Nussbaum, Sibyl Schwarzenbach, Laurie Shrage, Theresa A. Reed, Joshua Cohen, Ronald Dworkin, Laura Kipnis, Tracy Quan, Julian Marlowe, Scott A. Anderson, and Debra Satz
    In Prostitution and Pornography: Philosophical Debate About the Sex Industry, Stanford University Press. pp. 445-466. 2006.
  •  1218
    18. Obscene Division: Feminist Liberal Assessments of Prostitution Versus Feminist Liberal Defenses of Pornography
    In Prostitution and Pornography: Philosophical Debate About the Sex Industry, Stanford University Press. pp. 419-444. 2006.
    In assessing ethical issues concerning the sex-industry, feminist liberalism ought to combine the concern for the worker that is central to its treatment of prostitution, with sensitivity to the social and cultural embeddedness of self that is central to its treatment of pornography. That would enable us to then look at live-actor pornography as a form of prostitution that raises additional questions about third party consumption — and analysis both more theoretically coherent and practically us…Read more
    In assessing ethical issues concerning the sex-industry, feminist liberalism ought to combine the concern for the worker that is central to its treatment of prostitution, with sensitivity to the social and cultural embeddedness of self that is central to its treatment of pornography. That would enable us to then look at live-actor pornography as a form of prostitution that raises additional questions about third party consumption — and analysis both more theoretically coherent and practically useful.
    PornographySex Work and ProstitutionPhilosophy of Sexuality, MiscellaneousNormative EthicsEthical Th…Read more
    PornographySex Work and ProstitutionPhilosophy of Sexuality, MiscellaneousNormative EthicsEthical Theories and Sexual EthicsSexual ActivitiesDefining Sexual ActivitySexual Desire
  •  64
    Introduction: Sex, Money, and Philosophy
    In Prostitution and Pornography: Philosophical Debate About the Sex Industry, Stanford University Press. pp. 1-14. 2006.
    Feminism: The BodyEthical Theories and Sexual EthicsSexual Ethics, MiscSexual RightsFeminism: Autono…Read more
    Feminism: The BodyEthical Theories and Sexual EthicsSexual Ethics, MiscSexual RightsFeminism: AutonomyFeminism: Sex Work and ProstitutionFeminism: The SelfSexual ConsentFeminism: SexualityFeminism: Pornography
  • Looking Through the Mind's I: Empiricism, Moral Psychology, and Hume's Trouble with the Self
    Dissertation, The University of Chicago. 1998.
    The treatment of personal identity in Hume's Treatise displays a shift that is both interesting as an object lesson in the weakness of a particular sort of empirical project, and important for what it teaches about investigating moral life. By examining Hume's change in method and project, I show that theoretical epistemology and practical moral philosophy come together in Hume's account of the passions, and that out of this convergence arises an account of the way interpersonal relations struct…Read more
    The treatment of personal identity in Hume's Treatise displays a shift that is both interesting as an object lesson in the weakness of a particular sort of empirical project, and important for what it teaches about investigating moral life. By examining Hume's change in method and project, I show that theoretical epistemology and practical moral philosophy come together in Hume's account of the passions, and that out of this convergence arises an account of the way interpersonal relations structure our very sense and idea of self. This account of self provides an explanation of moral motivation and the social elements of moral judgment that is naturalistic without being reductive. ;In his turn from the understanding in Book I to the passions in Book II, Hume moves from examining the isolated individual elements of his own mind to investigating the way our mind works as we interact with other persons. Instead of considering the components of thought atomistically, as if each constituent of thought has a nature independent of and unaffected by its relation to other constituents of thought, he considers the network of thought and passion that makes up mental life, developing a picture of the self that is dependent upon the whole of experience, rather than just individual impressions and ideas, considered separately. ;Hume's recovery of the self in the account of the passions shows how the personal identity problem is not just a metaphysical problem concerning the possibility of a substantial self beneath our perceptions, but is a moral problem: it concerns how we assess ourselves and others as moral agents, in interaction with each other. More than just an adjustment to fit the topic of the passions, Hume's change in method indicates an evolution in the kinds of questions he is pursuing. As he turns away from a piecemeal examination of individual elements of his thought to an examination of how persons function in passional life, his inquiry into the source of our idea of self evolves into an investigation of self-awareness and its development through the passions and social experience.
    Hume: A Treatise of Human NatureLocke: PersonsHume: Personal IdentityHume: Moral CognitivismHume: Em…Read more
    Hume: A Treatise of Human NatureLocke: PersonsHume: Personal IdentityHume: Moral CognitivismHume: EmotionPersonal Identity, Misc
  •  234
    Value in Fact: Naturalism and Normativity in Hume's Moral Psychology
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 41 (2): 145-163. 2003.
    Since it is Hume who famously asked how an "ought" can ever possibly be deduced from an "is," it is Hume who is typically cast as the representative of empiricism's inadequacy for doing the work of ethics. Yet, as I will show, in his description of the proper functioning of the passions that necessarily involve other persons and their evaluations of us, Hume provides a naturalistic description that is not reductive of value, but rather incorporates values into the very ground of empirical descri…Read more
    Since it is Hume who famously asked how an "ought" can ever possibly be deduced from an "is," it is Hume who is typically cast as the representative of empiricism's inadequacy for doing the work of ethics. Yet, as I will show, in his description of the proper functioning of the passions that necessarily involve other persons and their evaluations of us, Hume provides a naturalistic description that is not reductive of value, but rather incorporates values into the very ground of empirical description. Contemporary moral philosophers who dismiss Hume's complex account of the passions as unnecessary for understanding his account of morals, and then fault the account of morals for its failure to move beyond mere description to any kind of normative assessment, ignore how the detail of Hume's own account of the passions suggests a way that an empirical account can in fact be value-laden, as we shall see.
    Hume: Meta-EthicsHume: Normative EthicsNormativity and NaturalismMoral Emotivism and Sentimentalism
  •  257
    Prostitution and Pornography: Philosophical Debate About the Sex Industry (edited book)
    Stanford University Press. 2006.
    _Prostitution and Pornography_ examines debates about the sex industry and the adequacy of the liberal response to critiques of the sex industry. The anthology focuses particularly on the very different ways prostitution and pornography are treated. Unlike other books that deal with the sex industry, this volume brings together academics and industry veterans and survivors to discuss the ways prostitution, pornography, and other forms of commercial sex are treated, and to ask questions about the…Read more
    _Prostitution and Pornography_ examines debates about the sex industry and the adequacy of the liberal response to critiques of the sex industry. The anthology focuses particularly on the very different ways prostitution and pornography are treated. Unlike other books that deal with the sex industry, this volume brings together academics and industry veterans and survivors to discuss the ways prostitution, pornography, and other forms of commercial sex are treated, and to ask questions about the role that ideas about the self, personal identity, and freedom play in our attitudes about the sex industry.
    Feminism: PornographySocial Ethics, MiscSexual ConsentSexual RightsSexual ObjectificationSex Work an…Read more
    Feminism: PornographySocial Ethics, MiscSexual ConsentSexual RightsSexual ObjectificationSex Work and ProstitutionPhilosophy of Sexuality, MiscellaneousSexual Phenomena, MiscEthical Theories and Sexual EthicsSexual ActivitiesSexual Ethics, Misc
  •  243
    The Grounds of Moral Agency: Locke's Account of Personal Identity
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 5 (2): 256-281. 2008.
    For Locke, the personal identity problem was a moral problem from the beginning, an attempt to pin down the conditions for responsibility and accountability. This article discusses the implications of Locke's consciousness theory of personal identity for thought about the continuity of moral agency, arguing that Locke's treatment of personal identity is best understood in connection with his expanded discussion of liberty in the Essay and with his interest in the proper grounds for assessing res…Read more
    For Locke, the personal identity problem was a moral problem from the beginning, an attempt to pin down the conditions for responsibility and accountability. This article discusses the implications of Locke's consciousness theory of personal identity for thought about the continuity of moral agency, arguing that Locke's treatment of personal identity is best understood in connection with his expanded discussion of liberty in the Essay and with his interest in the proper grounds for assessing responsibility for action. By grounding personal identity in an agent's ability to recognize her actions as her own, Locke presents a picture of moral life compatible with skepticism about substance while not skeptical about morality. I argue that this description highlights some important features of self-awareness and personhood without resorting to any metaphysical suppositions such as soul, essence or spirit
    Locke: PersonsPersonal Identity, MiscWhat Matters in SurvivalLocke: IdentityValue Theory, Miscellane…Read more
    Locke: PersonsPersonal Identity, MiscWhat Matters in SurvivalLocke: IdentityValue Theory, MiscellaneousFreedom and LibertyLocke: Free Will
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