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157Freedom first: On coercion and coercive offersPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 111 (1): 106-126. 2025.The dominant theories of coercion and coercive offers today are moralized, in the sense that they explain the prima facie wrongfulness of coercive incentivization on the basis that such incentivization essentially involves some other, independent wrong, such as a conditional proposal to violate another's rights. I develop and defend a new version of a more old‐school theory, according to which coercive incentivization is prima facie wrong fundamentally because it threatens another's freedom. Coe…Read more
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140Marx's Ethical Vision by Vanessa Christina Wills New York: Oxford University Press, 2024. 320 pp. ISBN: 9780197688144European Journal of Philosophy 33 (2): 821-826. 2025.European Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
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207The Difficulty of Making Good Work Available to AllJournal of Applied Philosophy 41 (2): 267-288. 2024.How might good work – skilled, autonomous work which affords workers opportunities for meaningful social cooperation in decent conditions – be made available to all? I evaluate five commonly advanced strategies: an unregulated labor market, egalitarian redistribution of resources, state regulation, collective bargaining, and workplace democracy. Each, I argue, has significant limitations. An unregulated labor market ignores workers' unduly weak bargaining power vis-à-vis employers. Egalitarian r…Read more
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9972The Unity of Marx’s Concept of Alienated LaborPhilosophical Review 133 (1): 33-71. 2024.Marx says of alienated labor that it does not “belong” to the worker, that it issues in a product that does not belong to her, and that it is unfulfilling, unfree, egoistically motivated, and inhuman. He seems to think, moreover, that the first of these features grounds all the others. All of these features seem quite independent, however: they can come apart; they share no obvious common cause or explanation; and if they often occur together, this seems accidental. It is not clear, then, how Ma…Read more
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265Freedom, Desire, and Necessity: Autonomous Activity as Activity for Its Own SakeJournal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 24 (3): 434-465. 2023.I defend a necessary condition of local autonomy inspired by Aristotle and Marx. One does something autonomously, I argue, only if one does it for its own sake and not for the sake of further ends alone. I show that this idea steers an attractive middle path between the subjectivism of Dworkin- and Frankfurt-style theories of autonomy on the one hand and the objectivism of Raz-style theories on the other. By doing so, it vindicates and explains two important pieces of common sense of which those…Read more
Evanston, Illinois, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| 19th Century Philosophy |