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129Review of Steven Lukes's The Diversity of Morals (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. 2026.This is a short review of Steven Lukes's 2025 book The Diversity of Morals (Princeton University Press, 2025).
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14Ethical Theories as Methods of EthicsIn Mark Timmons (ed.), Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics, Volume 11, Oxford University Press. pp. 247-269. 2022.This chapter presents a new argument for thinking of traditional ethical theories not as criteria of rightness and wrongness, but rather as methods that can be used in first-order moral inquiry. It begins from outlining how ethical theories such as consequentialism and contractualism are flexible frameworks in which different versions of these theories can be formulated to correspond to different first-order ethical views. This chapter then argues that, as a result, the traditional ethical theor…Read more
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11Contractualism and the Counter-Culture ChallengeIn Mark C. Timmons (ed.), Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics, Vol 7, Oxford University Press. pp. 184-206. 2017.T. M. Scanlon’s contractualism attempts to give an account of right and wrong in terms of the moral code that could not be reasonably rejected. Reasonable rejectability is then a function of what kind of consequences the general adoption of different moral codes has for different individuals. It has been shown that moral codes should be compared at a lower than 100% level of social acceptance. This leads to the counter-culture challenge. The problem is that the cultural background of the individ…Read more
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10Contractualism and the Conditional FallacyIn Mark Timmons (ed.), Oxford Studies Normative Ethics: Volume 4, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 113-137. 2014.Most contractualist ethical theories have a subjunctivist structure. This means that they attempt to make sense of right and wrong in terms of a set of principles which would be accepted in some idealized, non-actual circumstances. This makes these views vulnerable to the so-called conditional fallacy objection. The moral principles that are appropriate for the idealized circumstances fail to give a correct account of what is right and wrong in the ordinary situations. This chapter uses two vers…Read more
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Non-Naturalism: The Jackson ChallengeIn Russ Shafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Oxford University Press. 2010.
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1Non-Naturalism: The Jackson ChallengeIn Russ Shafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Oxford University Press. 2010.
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441Review of Shelly Kagan's Answering Moral Skepticism (OUP, 2023) (review)Utilitas 38 (1): 68-71. 2026.This is a short review of Shelly Kagan's book Answering Moral Skepticism (OUP, 2023).
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343Resisting the New Contextualist Orthodoxy in MetaethicsOxford Studies in Metaethics 21 217-241. 2026.According to metaethical contextualism, normative sentence types do not express complete truth-evaluable contents, but rather only a sentence-token as uttered in a context does so. This is because, on their view, the context is required to supplement the missing elements of the sentence type meaning to complete the content. After explaining this currently popular view, this chapter makes three objections to it. It argues that metaethical contextualism seems incompatible with the intuitive felici…Read more
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2837Naturalism in MetaethicsIn Kelly James Clark (ed.), The Blackwell Companion to Naturalism, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 351-368. 2015.This chapter offers an introduction to naturalist views in contemporary metaethics. Such views attempt to find a place for normative properties (such as goodness and rightness) in the concrete physical world as it is understood by both science and common sense. The chapter begins by introducing simple naturalist conceptual analyses of normative terms. It then explains how these analyses were rejected in the beginning of the 20th Century due to G.E. Moore’s influential Open Question Argument. Af…Read more
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1055How to Dissolve the Moral ProblemBelgrade Philosophical Annual 37 (1): 121-145. 2024.According to The Moral Problem, there is so much metaethical disagreement because it is difficult to explain both the objectivity and the practicality of moral judgments in the framework provided by the Humean picture of human psychology. Smith himself hoped to solve this problem by analysing the content of our moral judgments in terms of what our fully rational versions would want us to do. This paper first explains why this solution to the moral problem remains problematic and why we therefore…Read more
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2002Parfit on Personal Identity and Ethical TheoriesOxford Studies in Normative Ethics 15 168-191. 2025.In his early works, Derek Parfit famously defended revisionary reductionism about personhood. According to this view, facts about personal identity consist in the holding of more particular psychological facts, which can be described wholly impersonally. He also argued that, in some cases, the truth of this view makes questions about diachronic personal identity empty questions to which no meaningful answers can be given. Yet, in his later works, Parfit defends several ethical theories such as c…Read more
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1040Anti-Luminosity and Anti-Realism in MetaethicsSynthese 203 (6): 1-24. 2024.This paper begins by applying a version of Timothy Williamson’s anti-luminosity argument to normative properties. This argument suggests that there must be at least some unknowable normative facts in normative Sorites sequences, or otherwise we get a contradiction given certain plausible assumptions concerning safety requirements on knowledge and our doxastic dispositions. This paper then focuses on the question of how the defenders of different forms of metaethical anti-realism (namely, error t…Read more
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2554Moral Relativism and Moral DisagreementIn Maria Baghramian, J. Adam Carter & Rach Cosker-Rowland (eds.), Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Disagreement, Routledge. 2024.This chapter focuses on the connection between moral disagreement and moral relativism. Moral relativists, generally speaking, think both (i) that there is no unique objectively correct moral standard and (ii) that the rightness and wrongness of an action depends in some way on a moral standard accepted by some group or an individual. This chapter will first consider the metaphysical and epistemic arguments for moral relativism that begin from the premise that there is considerable amount of mor…Read more
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1146Metaethics and the Nature of PropertiesAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 98 (1): 113-131. 2024.This paper explores the connection between two philosophical debates concerning the nature of properties. The first metaethical debate is about whether normative properties are ordinary natural properties or some unique kind of non-natural properties. The second metaphysical debate is about whether properties are sets of objects, transcendent or immanent universals, or sets of tropes. I argue that nominalism, transcendent realism, and immanent realism are not neutral frameworks for the metaethic…Read more
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1995Act and Rule Consequentialism: A SynthesisMoral Philosophy and Politics 12 (1): 107-126. 2025.As an indirect ethical theory, rule consequentialism first evaluates moral codes in terms of how good the consequences of their general adoption are and then individual actions in terms of whether or not the optimific code authorises them. There are three well-known and powerful objections to rule consequentialism’s indirect structure: the ideal world objection, the rule worship objection, and the incoherence objection. These objections are all based on cases in which following the optimific cod…Read more
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385IntroductionIn Jussi Suikkanen & John Cottingham (eds.), Essays on Derek Parfit's On what matters, Wiley-blackwell. 2009.This chapter contains sections titled: Reasons, Rationality, and Morality Interpreting Kantian Ethics Kantian Contractualism, Consequentialism, and the Master Argument.
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896Normative Judgments, Motivation, and EvolutionFilosofiska Notiser 10 (1): 23-48. 2023.This paper first outlines a new taxonomy of different views concerning the relationship between normative judgments and motivation. In this taxonomy, according to the Type A views, a positive normative judgment concerning an action consists at least in part of motivation to do that action. According to the Type B views, motivation is never a constituent of a positive normative judgment even if such judgments have, due to the kind of states they are, a causal power to produce motivation in an age…Read more
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5798Subjectivism, Relativism and Contextualism (2nd ed.)In Christian B. Miller (ed.), The Bloomsbury Handbook of Ethics, 2nd Edition, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 130-149. 2023.There is a family of metaethical views according to which (i) there are no objectively correct moral standards and (ii) whether a given moral claim is true depends in some way on moral standards accepted by either an individual (forms of subjectivism) or a community (forms of relativism). This chapter outlines the three most important versions of this type of theories: old-fashioned subjectivism and relativism, contextualism and new wave subjectivism and relativism. It also explores the main…Read more
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1404Nonnaturalism, the Supervenience Challenge, Higher-Order Properties, and Trope TheoryJournal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 26 (3): 601-632. 2024.Nonnaturalist realism is the view that normative properties are unique kind of stance-independent properties. It has been argued that such views fail to explain why two actions that are exactly alike otherwise must also have the same normative properties. Mark Schroeder and Knut Olav Skarsaune have recently suggested that nonnaturalist realists can respond to this supervenience challenge by taking the primary bearers of normative properties to be action kinds. This paper develops their response …Read more
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1372Hooker's rule‐consequentialism and Scanlon's contractualism—A re‐evaluationRatio 35 (4): 261-274. 2022.Brad Hooker’s rule-consequentialism and T.M. Scanlon’s contractualism have been some of the most debated ethical theories in normative ethics during the last twenty years or so. This article suggests that these theories can be compared at two levels. Firstly, what are the deep, structural differences between the rule-consequentialist and contractualist frameworks in which Hooker and Scanlon formulate their views? Secondly, what are the more superficial differences between Hooker’s and Scanlon’s …Read more
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2588ContractualismIn Michael Hemmingsen (ed.), Ethical Theory in Global Perspective, Suny Press. pp. 221-236. 2024.This is a chapter on contractualism for Ethical Theory in Global Perspective, edited by Michael Hemmingsen (SUNY Press). The chapter (i) outlines contractualism as an ethical theory, (ii) explains how it differs from classical utilitarianism, (iii) explores the differences between ex post and ex ante contractualism, and (iv) finally looks at two traditional objections to the view.
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3031Ethical Theories as Methods of EthicsOxford Studies in Normative Ethics 11 247-269. 2021.This chapter presents a new argument for thinking of traditional ethical theories as methods that can be used in first-order ethics - as a kind of deliberation procedures rather than as criteria of right and wrong. It begins from outlining how ethical theories, such as consequentialism and contractualism, are flexible frameworks in which different versions of these theories can be formulated to correspond to different first-order ethical views. The chapter then argues that, as a result, the trad…Read more
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6627ContractualismCambridge University Press. 2020.This essay begins by describing T.M. Scanlon’s contractualism according to which an action is right when it is authorised by the moral principles no one could reasonably reject. This view has argued to have implausible consequences with regards to how different-sized groups, non-human animals, and cognitively limited human beings should be treated. It has also been accused of being theoretically redundant and unable to vindicate the so-called deontic distinctions. I then distinguish between the …Read more
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836Review of Rach Cosker-Rowland's the Normative and the Evaluative - the Buck-Passing Account of Value (review)Ethics 130 (2): 255-259. 2020.This is a short review of Rach Cosker-Rowland's book The Normative and the Evaluative - the Buck-Passing Account of Value
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1943Ex Ante and Ex Post Contractualism: A SynthesisThe Journal of Ethics 23 (1): 77-98. 2019.According to contractualist theories in ethics, whether an action is wrong is determined by whether it could be justified to others on grounds no one could reasonably reject. Contractualists then think that reasonable rejectability of principles depends on the strength of the personal objections individuals can make to them. There is, however, a deep disagreement between contractualists concerning from which temporal perspective the relevant objections to different principles are to be made. Are…Read more
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836The advice models of happiness: a response to FeldmanInternational Journal of Wellbeing 9 (2): 8-13. 2019.In his critical notice entitled ‘An Improved Whole Life Satisfaction Theory of Happiness?’ focusing on my article that was previously published in this journal, Fred Feldman raises an important objection to a suggestion I made about how to best formulate the whole life satisfaction theories of happiness. According to my proposal, happiness is a matter of whether an idealised version of you would judge that your actual life corresponds to the life-plan, which he or she has constructed for you on …Read more
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1617Consequentialism, Constraints, and Good-Relative-toJournal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 3 (1): 1-9. 2008.Recently, it has been a part of the so-called consequentializing project to attempt to construct versions of consequentialism that can support agent-relative moral constraints. Mark Schroeder has argued that such views are bound to fail because they cannot make sense of the agent relative value on which they need to rely. In this paper, I provide a fitting-attitude account of both agent-relative and agent-neutral values that can together be used to consequentialize agent-relative constraints.
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2520Consequentializing Moral DilemmasJournal of Moral Philosophy 17 (3): 261-289. 2020.The aim of the consequentializing project is to show that, for every plausible ethical theory, there is a version of consequentialism that is extensionally equivalent to it. One challenge this project faces is that there are common-sense ethical theories that posit moral dilemmas. There has been some speculation about how the consequentializers should react to these theories, but so far there has not been a systematic treatment of the topic. In this article, I show that there are at least five w…Read more
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632IntroductionIn Jussi Suikkanen & Antti Kauppinen (eds.), Methodology and Moral Philosophy, Routledge. pp. 1-20. 2018.This chapter begins by explaining two widespread attitudes towards the methods of moral philosophy. The first common attitude is that the appropriate method for doing ethics was described by John Rawls when he formulated the reflective equilibrium method. Another common attitude is that moral philosophy has no method – anything goes in ethical theorising as long as the results are significant enough. The chapter then motivates the volume by arguing that these attitudes are not helpful. The refle…Read more
Birmingham, England, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Normative Ethics |