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Larry Haworth

University of Waterloo
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    39
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  •  News and Updates
    5

 More details
  • University of Waterloo
    Department of Philosophy
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Action
Social and Political Philosophy
  • All publications (39)
  •  18
    Review
    with Norman Stockman, Lothar Czayka, Hermann Vetter, Michael Martin, Gordon Welty, Ulrich Kockelkorn, Herbert Stachowiak, and Alex C. Michalos
    Theory and Decision 2 (4): 371-402. 1972.
  •  1
    The Language of Justice
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 4 (4): 280-286. 2010.
  •  2
    Autonomy
    Philosophical Books 29 (3): 167-169. 2009.
  •  22
    The Deweyan View of Experience
    In Michael H. Mitias (ed.), Possibility of the aesthetic experience, Distributors For the U.s. and Canada, Kluwer Academic. pp. 79--89. 1986.
  •  40
    Value Assumptions in Risk Assessment: A Case Study of the Alachlor Controversy
    with Conrad G. Brunk and Brenda Lee
    Wilfrid Laurier Press. 2006.
    Selected by Choice as one of the outstanding publications for 1991. Are risk debates disputes between those who accept the findings of science and those who do not? Between good and bad science? Or is it possible that opposing assessments of risk, by scientific experts as well as ordinary citizens, reflect and are guided by dominant values held by the assessors? The following analysis of one of these debates supports the latter view. In it we suggest what those dominant values are, how they work…Read more
    Selected by Choice as one of the outstanding publications for 1991. Are risk debates disputes between those who accept the findings of science and those who do not? Between good and bad science? Or is it possible that opposing assessments of risk, by scientific experts as well as ordinary citizens, reflect and are guided by dominant values held by the assessors? The following analysis of one of these debates supports the latter view. In it we suggest what those dominant values are, how they work within a risk assessment, and some implications of reconceiving risk debates as primarily debates about values.
  •  138
    Concerning value science
    with J. S. Minas
    Philosophy of Science 21 (1): 54-61. 1954.
    There has been much discussion in recent years of the possibilities for and nature of “value science.” The present paper is intended to be a contribution to this discussion. One encouraging feature of the bulk of current discussion of value science is that its protagonists have a definite end in view, namely, “human betterment,” taking that phrase in the common sense as covering, at least, a process of creating and maintaining such conditions of life as enable human beings successfully to engage…Read more
    There has been much discussion in recent years of the possibilities for and nature of “value science.” The present paper is intended to be a contribution to this discussion. One encouraging feature of the bulk of current discussion of value science is that its protagonists have a definite end in view, namely, “human betterment,” taking that phrase in the common sense as covering, at least, a process of creating and maintaining such conditions of life as enable human beings successfully to engage in satisfying activities.
    Value TheoryScience and ValuesSociology of Science
  •  151
    Book Review:Social Theory and Social Structure Robert Merton (review)
    Philosophy of Science 26 (1): 53-. 1959.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsSociology of Science
  •  129
    Book Review:A Natural Science of Society A. R. Radcliffe-Brown (review)
    Philosophy of Science 25 (4): 299-. 1958.
    Sociology of SciencePhilosophy of Social Science, Misc
  •  181
    A Natural Science of Society
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 10 (38): 160-162. 1959.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsPhilosophy of Social Science
  •  65
    Society, Law, and Morality: Readings in Social Philosophy
    Philosophy of Science 30 (4): 403-404. 1963.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsPhilosophy of Social Science
  •  81
    Social Theory and Social Structure
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 11 (44): 345-346. 1961.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsPhilosophy of Social Science, General Works
  •  79
    Book Review:Contemporary Philosophy James Jarrett, Sterling McMurrin (review)
    Philosophy of Science 22 (2): 172-. 1955.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  70
    Book Review:Reason in Society Paul Diesing (review)
    Philosophy of Science 30 (4): 398-. 1963.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  342
    The standard view of the state: A critique
    Ethics 73 (4): 266-278. 1963.
    Value TheorySocial and Political Philosophy
  •  98
    The Language of Justice
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 4 (4): 280-286. 1966.
    Justice
  •  34
    The Good City
    Philosophy of Science 35 (2): 198-198. 1968.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  126
    Rights, wrongs, and animals
    Ethics 88 (2): 95-105. 1978.
    RightsAnimal Rights
  •  207
    Common sense morality
    Ethics 65 (4): 250-260. 1954.
    Value TheoryValue Theory, Miscellaneous
  •  69
    Review of S ymposium on Sociological Theory (review)
    Philosophy of Science 27 (2): 217-. 1960.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  91
    Is a Scientific Assessment of Risk Possible? Value Assumptions in the Canadian Alachlor Controversy
    with Conrad Brunk and Brenda Lee
    Dialogue 30 (3): 235. 1991.
    Increasingly our society relies upon government regulatory agencies to protect its people, its institutions and its environment from the negative impacts of new technologies. These agencies are saddled with the task of deciding among strongly conflicting viewpoints represented by a wide range of interest groups and “value communities” within the society. When regulatory decisions are made some interests and values are protected while others are curtailed.
  •  56
    The Scientific Study of Social Behaviour
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 10 (39): 250-251. 1959.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  59
    The Scientific Study of Social Behaviour. Michael Argyle. New York: Philosophical Library, 1957. Pp. viii, 239. $6.00
    Philosophy of Science 25 (3): 228-229. 1958.
  •  72
    A dual-perspective model of agroecosystem health: System functions and system goals
    with Conrad Brunk, Dave Jennex, and Sue Arai
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 10 (2): 127-152. 1997.
    Environmental Ethics
  •  60
    Taking Rights Seriously (review)
    Political Theory 6 (1): 123-126. 1978.
    Social and Political Philosophy
  • Christine Swanton, Freedom: A Coherence Theory (review)
    Philosophy in Review 13 200-202. 1993.
    Ethics
  •  80
    Freedom (review)
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 24 (2): 337-354. 1994.
    Freedom and Liberty
  •  25
    Focal things and focal practices
    In Eric Higgs, Andrew Light & David Strong (eds.), Technology and the good life?, University of Chicago Press. pp. 55. 2000.
  • Utility and Rights
    In David Braybrooke (ed.), Studies in moral philosophy, Published By Blackwell With the Cooperation of the University of Pittsburgh. 1968.
    EthicsTopics in Decision TheoryUtility
  •  90
    Dworkin, Rights, and Persons
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 9 (3). 1979.
    In Taking Rights Seriously, Ronald Dworkin defends the thesis that some, at least, of the rights people have, and in particular the most fundamental rights such as free speech and religious freedom, are “rights against the state”. By this he means that they identify modes of action that individuals ought to be permitted to carry out, and interference with which ought to be banned, even if a majority in the society prefer that the actions be prohibited or prefer some other condition achievement o…Read more
    In Taking Rights Seriously, Ronald Dworkin defends the thesis that some, at least, of the rights people have, and in particular the most fundamental rights such as free speech and religious freedom, are “rights against the state”. By this he means that they identify modes of action that individuals ought to be permitted to carry out, and interference with which ought to be banned, even if a majority in the society prefer that the actions be prohibited or prefer some other condition achievement of which would require prohibiting them.
    Social and Political Philosophy
  •  71
    Liberal Neutrality
    Dialogue 27 (4): 711-. 1988.
    In Patterns of Moral Complexity, Charles Larmore describes three related ways in which moral and political theory are more complex than is often allowed. He objects to three parallel simplifications: that moral decision making largely consists in the application of rules to particular situations; that the ideals by which we are guided in our personal lives should also do service as political ideals, a simplification which he calls “expressivism”; and that there is but a single source of moral va…Read more
    In Patterns of Moral Complexity, Charles Larmore describes three related ways in which moral and political theory are more complex than is often allowed. He objects to three parallel simplifications: that moral decision making largely consists in the application of rules to particular situations; that the ideals by which we are guided in our personal lives should also do service as political ideals, a simplification which he calls “expressivism”; and that there is but a single source of moral value. Against these simplifications he argues in a sort of Aristotelian way for the centrality of judgment in moral reasoning; for the liberal principle that the state should not strive to express our highest personal ideal; and for the, I suppose eclectic, view that partiality, deontological reasons, and consequentialist reasons all have a place in moral reasoning and that therefore the moral person may well be caught in conflicts that present him or her with tragic choices. These are the three “patterns of moral complexity” that the title of the book refers to.
    Social and Political PhilosophyFreedom and Liberty
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