•  100
    The Mystery of God and the Suffering of Human Beings1
    Heythrop Journal 50 (5): 846-863. 2009.
    The proper theological response to the problem of reconciling human suffering with the Christian belief in a God of infinite wisdom, power, and goodness is not to try to solve the unsolvable, but to preserve the mystery of God. The concept ‘mystery’ as attributed to God signifies intelligibility — inexhaustible intelligibility — not contradiction. Mystery suggests the range and limits of a human being's knowledge of God. We cannot know why God permits suffering in this particular instance or the…Read more
  •  60
    This article assays Paul Ramsey's influential attempt to conceive possible nuclear deterrents within the confines of just war tenets. I look first at Ramsey's construction of just war ideas according to a protection paradigm, one in which agape is deontically defined. I also note a subtle sub-theme in Ramsey's construction of just war ideas, what I call a preservation motif. I then assess Ramsey's discussion of nuclear deterrence, closing with a critique of his treatments of intention and propor…Read more
  •  53
    From Rationality to Equality: Three Stages of Doubt
    The Journal of Ethics 18 (3): 253-264. 2014.
    James Sterba’s From Rationality to Equality is a bold effort to show that those who reject morality, coerced provision for basic needs, or a demanding egalitarian standard of justice violate precepts of rationality, resist the implications of their own deep convictions, or negligently ignore ecological dangers. Without opposing his moral conclusions, I present doubts about his arguments. The assessment of higher-ranking altruistic reasons that he calls “Morality as Compromise” is offered as dist…Read more
  •  163
    Humanitarian Intervention, Altruism, and the Limits of Casuistry
    Journal of Religious Ethics 28 (1). 2000.
    This essay argues that the ethics of humanitarian intervention cannot be readily subsumed by the ethics of just war without due attention to matters of political and moral motivation. In the modern era, a just war draws directly from self-benefitting motives in wars of self-defense, or indirectly in wars that enforce international law or promote the global common good. Humanitarian interventions, in contrast, are intuitively admirable insofar as they are other-regarding. That difference poses a …Read more
  •  9
    Cosmopolitan Respect and Patriotic Concern
    Philosophy and Public Affairs 27 (3): 202-224. 2006.
  •  78
    A Clinical Science
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 18 (4). 1988.
    Adolf Grünbaurn’s criticisms of psychoanalytic theory are the most sustained and powerful effort in our time to make the philosophy of science useful, useful in the pursuit of theories and evidence and useful in the relief of suffering. His work shows, I think, that some important claims that psychoanalytic theory has achieved certain scientific goals at best express unjustified hopes. These failures will not discourage those who think that the goals of the human sciences are radically different…Read more
  •  104
    Moral Contractualism and Moral Sensitivity
    Social Theory and Practice 28 (2): 193-220. 2002.
  •  84
    Respectable Oppressors, Hypocritical Liberators
    In Dean Chatterjee & Donald Scheid (eds.), Ethics and Foreign Intervention, Cambridge University Press. pp. 215--250. 2003.
  •  2
    Global Power and Economic Justice
    In Charles R. Beitz & Robert E. Goodin (eds.), Global Basic Rights, Oxford University Press. 2009.
  •  36
    Social and Political Theory
    In Terrell Carver (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Marx, Cambridge University Press. pp. 55--105. 1991.
  •  106
    The Ethics of America's Afghan War
    Ethics and International Affairs 25 (2): 103-131. 2011.
    The United States has had a moral duty, at least since the end of 2010, actively to pursue negotiations with the Taliban and Pakistan to achieve a political settlement, conceding control of the Pashtun countryside to the Taliban.
  •  68
    Michael Blake's Border Controls
    Ethics and International Affairs 29 (3): 289-299. 2015.
  •  12
    Meaningful Projects
    In George Levine (ed.), Realism and Representation, University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 100--124. 1993.
  •  102
  •  117
    Terrorism and legitimacy: A response to Virginia held
    Journal of Social Philosophy 36 (2). 2005.
  •  168
    Killing for the homeland: Patriotism, nationalism and violence (review)
    The Journal of Ethics 1 (2): 165-185. 1997.
    Political choices favoring one''s country or one''s nationality are wrong if they conflict with a principle of universal free acceptability, prohibiting choices that violate every set of rules to which any willing cooperator would want all to conform. Despite its universalism, this principle requires patriotic favoritism in political choices and permits individuals to assert nationalist interests in claims for state aid. But it deprives patriotism and nationalism of any distinctive role in estab…Read more
  • Cosmopolitan respect and patriotic concern
    In Gillian Brock & Harry Brighouse (eds.), The Political Philosophy of Cosmopolitanism, Cambridge University Press. 2005.
  • Editorial
    Philosophical Studies 58 (1): 1. 1990.
  •  2
    Analyzing Marx
    Philosophical Studies 53 (1): 157-172. 1988.