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4Structural analysis of code-based algorithms of the NIST post-quantum callLogic Journal of the IGPL. forthcoming.Code-based cryptography is currently the second most promising post-quantum mathematical tool for quantum-resistant algorithms. Since in 2022 the first post-quantum standard Key Encapsulation Mechanism, Kyber (a latticed-based algorithm), was selected to be established as standard, and after that the National Institute of Standards and Technology post-quantum standardization call focused in code-based cryptosystems. Three of the four candidates that remain in the fourth round are code-based algo…Read more
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14Managing Diversity Flashpoints in Higher EducationRowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2007.Covering a timely topic, which is more and more frequently in the news, this book offers vignettes that will sharpen the reader's ability to recognize and respond to difficult situations sparked by identity differences among faculty, staff, and students in college and university settings. The authors provide a systematic guide to addressing interpersonal conflicts that arise out of issues of identity difference, both for individuals and for campus work teams who provide direct service to student…Read more
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32Virtue Ethics in Social TheoryAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 60 (4): 329-340. 2023.Tommie Shelby has offered an influential, carefully stated, and well-argued set of objections to any volitional analysis of racism (VAR) as consisting centrally in certain forms of race-based disregard. Here I hope to defend aspects of VAR by analyzing, evaluating, and sometimes countering several of his major contentions, which have stood unchallenged in the literature over more than two decades. First, I sketch and respond to his Methodological objection to VAR, which criticizes VAR's reliance…Read more
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20A Note on Religious Assent and DissentLogos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 4 (2): 160-177. 2001.
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19Death of the (Hand)maiden: Contemporary Philosophy in Faith and ReasonLogos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 2 (3): 11-19. 1999.
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13Are Some People Better Off Dead?Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 2 (1): 68-81. 1999.
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13Risk and Protective Factors Associated to Peer School VictimizationFrontiers in Psychology 8. 2017.
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24SPEECH IN HOMER - Beck Speech Presentation in Homeric Epic. Pp. xii + 256. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2012. Cased, US$55. ISBN: 978-0-292-73880-5 (review)The Classical Review 64 (1): 12-14. 2014.
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21Methods and Findings in the Study of Virtues: HumilityPhilosophia 43 (2): 325-335. 2015.I sketch and respond to Ryan Byerly’s distinction between a Value-Based Approach to assessing proposed accounts of a virtue-here, humility-and what he calls a Counterexample Based Approach. My first section, on method, argues that, though distinct, the two approaches are not mutually exclusive and answer different questions. Engaging his claim that the former approach is superior to the latter, I suggest that we apply Byerly’s own idea that there are different kinds of value to show, contra Byer…Read more
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178Health versus harm: Euthanasia and physicians' dutiesJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (1). 2007.This essay rebuts Gary Seay's efforts to show that committing euthanasia need not conflict with a physician's professional duties. First, I try to show how his misunderstanding of the correlativity of rights and duties and his discussion of the foundation of moral rights undermine his case. Second, I show aspects of physicians' professional duties that clash with euthanasia, and that attempts to avoid this clash lead to absurdities. For professional duties are best understood as deriving from pr…Read more
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28From Neighbor-Love to Utilitarianism, and BackProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 89 1-32. 2015.Contrasting loving our neighbors with utilitarians’ demand to maximize good reveals important metatheoretic structures and dynamics that I call virtues- basing, input drive, role centering, and patient focus. First, love (good will) is a virtue; such virtues are foundational to both moral obligations and the impersonally valuable. Second, part of loving is acting lovingly. Whether and how I act lovingly, and how loving it is, is a matter of motivation; this input-driven account contrasts with hi…Read more
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177Being unimpressed with ourselves: Reconceiving humilityPhilosophia 34 (4): 417-435. 2006.I first sketch an account of humility as a character trait in which we are unimpressed with our good, envied, or admired features, achievements, etc., where these lack significant salience for our image of ourselves, because of the greater prominence of our limitations and flaws. I situate this view among several other recent conceptions of humility (also called modesty), dividing them between the inward-directed and outward-directed, distinguish mine from them, pose problems for each alternativ…Read more
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89Book ReviewsLawrence Blum,. “I’m Not a Racist, but …”: The Moral Quandary of Race.Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2002. Pp. 272. $52.50 ; $19.95 (review)Ethics 118 (2): 332-337. 2008.
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77Anscombe's Three Theses Revisited: Rethinking the Foundations of Medical EthicsChristian Bioethics 14 (2): 123-140. 2008.At the start of her vigorously argued and classic article, “Modern Moral Philosophy,” G. E. M. Anscombe stated three focal theses. First, that philosophers of the time needed to dispense with investigation into talk of what is morally right, wrong; permissible, forbidden, required; and of moral obligation or duty, what we morally ought to do. Second, there was no adequate philosophical psychology then available of the sort needed for doing good moral philosophy. Third, the differences among the …Read more
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20Family of Bistable Attractors Contained in an Unstable Dissipative Switching System Associated to a SNLFComplexity 2018 1-9. 2018.
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41Identity confusionsPhilosophy and Social Criticism 32 (7): 839-862. 2006.This article responds to logical and social theses proposed by Professor José Medina in discussing the relativity of identity. In exploring the metaphor of family resemblance, the author argues that its causal mechanism is biological, not social; particular features of being a woman, or of belonging to a racial or ethnic group, cannot be reduced to social constructions. The article skeptically discusses the supposed importance of sex, race, and ethnicity to a person’s individual identity, and su…Read more
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62Sin and Suffering in a Catholic Understanding of Medical EthicsChristian Bioethics 12 (2): 165-186. 2006.Drawing chiefly on recent sources, in Part One I sketch an untraditional way of articulating what I claim to be central elements of traditional Catholic morality, treating it as based in virtues, focused on the recipients (“patients”) of our attention and concern, and centered in certain person-to-person role-relationships. I show the limited and derivative places of “natural law,” and therefore of sin, within that framework. I also sketch out some possible implications for medical ethics of thi…Read more
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59A Volitional Account of Racist Beliefs, Contamination, and ObjectsProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 92 59-85. 2018.Prof. Alberto Urquidez, in an important recent article that appears in different form in his book, Redefining Racism, offers an informed, sustained, careful, multi-pronged, and sometimes original critique of the volitional analysis of racism, which I have proposed in a series of articles over the past two dozen years. Here I expand and improve VAR’s analysis of paternalistic racists and their beliefs, clarify its ‘infection’-model’s explanation of racism’s spread and variety, and lay out what it…Read more
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116Race as a Social ConstructionThe Harvard Review of Philosophy 26 115-133. 2019.This paper raises serious problems for the commonly held claim that races are socially constructed. The first section sketches out an approach to our construction of institutional phenomena that, taking Searle’s general approach, restricts social construction proper to cases where we adopt rules that bind relevant parties to treat things of a type in certain ways, thus constituting important roles in, and parts of, our social lives. I argue this conception, construction-by-rules, helps distingui…Read more
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115. Are Some People Better Off Dead? A ReflectionLogos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 2 (1). 1999.
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22. Death of the (Hand)maiden: Contemporary Philosophy in Faith and ReasonLogos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 2 (3). 1999.
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68. A Note on Religious Assent and DissentLogos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 4 (2). 2001.
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165. White Nights of the Soul: Chritopher Nolan's Insomnia and the Renewal of Moral Reflection in FilmLogos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 9 (4). 2006.
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