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549Necessity Over TimeJournal of Moral Philosophy 1-27. 2025.This article explores how the necessity condition for permissible self-defense operates over time. It addresses two core questions. First: when, leading up to an attack, does the necessity condition begin to apply? Second: if it applies before an attack, what are the implications of disregarding it? I argue that if aggressors are fully culpable, the condition applies only at the moment of attack. For less culpable aggressors, however, it can require that defenders act earlier to avoid or reduce …Read more
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1286Provocation, Self‐Defense, and Protective DutiesPhilosophy and Public Affairs 52 (4): 465-499. 2024.This paper explores why victims who provoke their aggressors seem to compromise their right to self-defence. First, it argues that one proposed answer – the victims are partially responsible for the threats they face – fails. It faces counterexamples that it cannot adequately address. Second, the paper develops the Protective Duty View according to which we incur protective duties towards others when we interfere with their reasonable opportunities to avoid suffering harm. Since provokers wrongf…Read more
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690Review of Christopher Nathan, The Ethics of Undercover Policing (Routledge, 2022)Criminal Law and Philosophy 18 (1): 315-323. 2024.This paper reviews The Ethics of Undercover Policing by Christopher Nathan.
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843Entrapment and ManipulationRes Publica 28 (4): 557-583. 2022.Why is it wrong to punish criminals who have been entrapped by the state? The paper begins by presenting some criticisms of existing answers to this question. First, they fail to put the target, or victim, of entrapment at the centre of the moral explanation. Second, they fail to account for the intuitive relation between the reasons not to entrap and the reasons not to punish. Third, they struggle to account for the existence of agent-neutral reasons not to punish entrapped offenders. Lastly, t…Read more
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748The Ethics of Political Bots: Should We Allow Them For Personal Use?Journal of Practical Ethics 5 (2): 85-104. 2017.The technology to create and automate large numbers of fake social media users, or “social bots”, is becoming increasingly more accessible to private individuals. This paper explores one potential use of the technology, namely the creation of “political bots”: social bots aimed at influencing the political opinions of others. Despite initial worries about licensing the use of such bots by private individuals, this paper provides an, albeit limited, argument in favour of this. The argument begins…Read more
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