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157Teleology and reduction in biologyBiology and Philosophy 1 (4): 389-399. 1986.The main claim in this paper is that because organisms have teleological constitutions, the reduction of biology to physical science is not possible. It is argued that the teleology of organisms is intrinsic and not merely projected onto them. Many organic phenomena are end-oriented and reference to ends is necessary for explaining them. Accounts in terms of functions or goals are appropriate to organic parts and processes. siis is because ends as systemic requirements for survival and health ha…Read more
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10Dimensions of Moral Theory: An Introduction to Metaethics and Moral PsychologyWiley-Blackwell. 2002.
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9Taking Ethical Disability SeriouslyRatio 11 (2): 141-158. 2002.Aristotle's ethical theorizing contains resources for explaining what I call ‘ethical disability’. In theories such as Kant's and Mill's it is important that criteria of right action be accessible to anyone. Aristotle's moral psychology yields a plausible account of how they are not available to everyone. Unless a correct appreciation of good is part of the agent's second nature, the agent will not recognize ethical requirements, and will not have the resources to alter his judgments. Often, bad…Read more
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37Moral agency in Eastern and Western thought: perspectives on crafting character (edited book)Routledge. 2024.This volume explores how individuals use moral agency to craft the moral dispositions and moral capabilities needed for living well-lived lives. It draws on Eastern and Western philosophical and ethical traditions to formulate and address key issues concerning character development and moral agency. In both Eastern and Western traditions, the complexities of shaping an individual's moral agency focus on sustained processes of inner self-cultivation. The chapters in this volume highlight the ways…Read more
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109Divine command ethics: Jewish and Christian perspectives. By Michael J. HarrisHeythrop Journal 49 (3). 2008.
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79Theism, blame and perfectionHeythrop Journal 41 (2). 2000.Blame and also punishment do not reach many agents in the sense that many agents are not motivated to ethically self‐correct, and in fact, may be worsened by these practices. The main reasons agents may not be reached by them are that the agent's second nature may make inaccessible to him a sound appreciation of ethical considerations, and the fixity of mature character may make ethical self‐correction practically impossible. Still, when they are ethically rationalized, blame and punishment seem…Read more
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56Saadia GaonIn H. Lagerlund (ed.), Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy, Springer. pp. 1171--1173. 2011.
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32A Contest of Wills (review)Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 3 (2). 2002.Jonathan Jacobs reviews The Contested Legacy of Ayn Rand, in which David Kelley responds to Objectivists who refuse to dialogue with libertarians, and examines the debate among Objectivists over the interpretation of Rand's thinking. Kelley argues that Rand presents crucial insights and claims and that these need to be developed and elaborated and not viewed as a fixed doctrine. Jacobs focuses on where Kelley situates himself among Objectivists, and raises critical concerns about the effectivene…Read more
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5“Forgiveness and Perfection,”In David Konstan Charles Grisowld (ed.), Ancient Forgiveness, Cambridge University Press. 2013.A study of the ways Maimonides and Aquinas both borrow from Aristotle and depart from him, in regard to the issue of forgiveness. The paper explicates moral-psychological issues and normative issues, connecting them to the perfectionism of the philosophical anthropology shared by the three thinkers. The theistic commitments of Maimonides and Aquinas ground important departures from Aristotle regarding the possibility of moral change and regarding moral relations between persons.
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13Tradition, rationality, and moral life : medieval Judaism's insightIn Judaic Sources and Western Thought: Jerusalem's Enduring Presence, Oxford University Press. pp. 127. 2011.
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Moral education, skills of civility, and virtue in the public sphereIn James Arthur (ed.), Virtues in the Public Sphere: Citizenship, Civic Friendship and Duty, Routledge Press. 2018.
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71Judaic Sources and Western Thought: Jerusalem's Enduring Presence (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2011.The essays in this volume bring into relief the distinctly Judaic origins of many of them and explicate how they remain valuable resources for moral and ...
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92The Epistemology of Moral TraditionReview of Metaphysics 64 (1): 55-74. 2010.An explication of the Maimonidean view that tradition--even when anchored in revelation---can be a mode of access to rationally justified moral requirements. The discussion focuses on the mutually reinforcing roles of enlarging understanding on the one hand, and engagement in practice on the other. Deepened understanding of the 'reasons for the commandments' can motivate commitment to practice, which in turn can aid in deepening understanding.
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71Punishing Society: Incarceration, Coercive Corruption, and the Liberal PolityCriminal Justice Ethics 33 (3): 200-219. 2014.Criminal justice in the United States is beset with several serious problems and challenges. While the issues are not entirely unique to the U.S. and can be found to some extent in other liberal de...
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45Note from the EditorCriminal Justice Ethics 40 (2): 85-85. 2021.As mentioned in the April 2021 issue of the journal, we are including some articles on Artificial Intelligence and ethics, and computer technology and ethics more broadly. In February 2020, the Ins...
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39EditorialCriminal Justice Ethics 32 (3): 185-186. 2013.Criminal Justice Ethics publishes articles by authors in different disciplines and areas of specialization. The journal reaches across several disciplinary boundaries and its contents are evidence...
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91Some Remarks on Criminology and Moral PhilosophyCriminal Justice Ethics 38 (3): 198-220. 2019.Recent developments in philosophy and in criminology indicate that there are significant respects in which the two disciplines can be mutually informing. Many philosophers are increasingly interested in exploring empirical aspects of philosophical claims, and criminologists are finding their way past the alleged fact/value distinction and are rediscovering the moral significance of facts, especially regarding punishment and desistance. In some recent criminological studies there are implicit lin…Read more
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38Note From the EditorCriminal Justice Ethics 32 (1): 19-19. 2013.Gordon Lloyd's article takes up issues of constitutional interpretation by the Supreme Court, examining the arguments in some key, early Court decisions. The discussion does not address criminal ju...
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121Aristotle and MaimonidesAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 76 (1): 145-163. 2002.Maimonides uses Aristotelian philosophical idiom to articulate his moral philosophy, but there are fundamental differences between his and Aristotle’s conceptions of moral psychology and the nature of the moral agent. The Maimonidean conception of volition and its role in repentance and ethical self-correction are quite un-Aristotelian. The relation between this capacity to alter one’s character and the accessibility of ethical requirements given in the Law is explored. This relation helps expla…Read more
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90The Liberal Polity, Criminal Sanction, and Civil SocietyCriminal Justice Ethics 32 (3): 1-16. 2013.The article explores an intersection of moral psychology and political principles regarding criminal sanction. A liberal state cannot require that persons acquire certain states of character or lead certain specific kinds of lives; it cannot require virtue. Moreover, it would be wrong for the state to punish offenders in ways that damage their capacities for agency, and in ways that encourage vice. In the U.S. the terms and conditions of punishment often have deleterious effects on agential capa…Read more
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67Character, liability, and morally unreachable agentsCriminal Justice Ethics 26 (2): 16-28. 2007.
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122Some tensions between autonomy and self-governanceSocial Philosophy and Policy 20 (2): 221-244. 2003.The notions of autonomy and self-governance each capture something crucial about the moral dimensions of agents and actions. These notions are central to the ways in which we conceptualize ourselves and others. The concept of autonomy is especially crucial to understanding the distinct status of moral agents. For its part, self-governance has a significant relation to the evaluation of agents as individuals with particular characters, leading particular sorts of lives, and performing particular …Read more
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107Review of Maimonides' Guide for the Perplexed: Science and Salvation, by Donald McCallum (review)Philosophy East and West 58 (3): 407-410. 2008.
Areas of Specialization
| Meta-Ethics |
| Philosophy of Law |
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Meta-Ethics |
| Philosophy of Law |
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |