• Productive freedom
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
    This paper presents and defends a new conception of freedom as a value in the sphere of economic production. It challenges the common, proprietarian-contractual view of economic liberty. My alternative integrates three elements: compossible control, non-alienation, and reason-responsiveness. After surveying various forms of freedom, conceptual ground is cleared for the presentation of those three elements in a relational structure. I define them, show how they interpenetrate, and argue for their…Read more
  • Gentrification and Integration
    Journal of Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Journal of Political Philosophy, EarlyView.
  • What (if Anything) is Ideological about Ideal Theory?
    Titus Stahl
    European Journal of Political Theory 147488512211071. 2022.
    It is sometimes argued that ideal theories in political philosophy are a form of ideology. This article examines arguments building on the work of Charles Mills and Raymond Geuss for the claim that ideal theories are cognitively distorting belief systems that have the effect of stabilizing unjust social arrangements. I argue that Mills and Geuss neither succeed in establishing that the content of ideal theories is necessarily cognitively defective in the way characteristic for ideologies, nor ca…Read more
  • Political normativity and the functional autonomy of politics
    European Journal of Political Theory 21 (4): 627-649. 2022.
    This article argues for a new interpretation of the realist claim that politics is autonomous from morality and involves specific political values. First, this article defends an original normative source: functional normativity. Second, it advocates a substantive functional standard: political institutions ought to be assessed by their capacity to select and implement collective decisions. Drawing from the ‘etiological account’ in philosophy of biology, I will argue that functions yield normati…Read more
  • ‘But it’s your job!’ the moral status of jobs and the dilemma of occupational duties
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
  • Why Does Class Matter?
    Social Theory and Practice 47 (4): 603-627. 2021.
    This article explores an under-examined theme, which is who or what is the working class and what is wrong with the situation that members of this class share. It argues that class divisions impose a unique harm for a diverse and interdependent group within capitalist societies both in spite and because of differences among group members. Class matters not just because it creates economic groups in which some are rich and others are poor, but because competition creates conditions that militate …Read more
  • The Epistemic Basic Structure
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 37 (5): 818-835. 2020.
    The epistemic basic structure of a society consists of those institutions that have the greatest impact on individuals’ opportunity to obtain knowledge on questions they have an interest in as citizens, individuals, and public officials. It plays a central role in the production and dissemination of knowledge and in ensuring that people have the capability to assimilate this knowledge. It includes institutions of science and education, the media, search engines, libraries, museums, think tanks, …Read more
  • How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Political Normativity
    Adrian Kreutz and Enzo Rossi
    Political Studies Review. forthcoming.
    Do salient normative claims about politics require moral premises? Political moralists think they do, political realists think they do not. We defend the viability of realism in a two-pronged way. First, we show that a number of recent attacks on realism, as well as realist responses to those attacks, unduly conflate distinctively political normativity and non-moral political normativity. Second, we argue that Alex Worsnip and Jonathan Leader-Maynard’s recent attack on realist arguments for a di…Read more