Skip to content
  • News
  • Blueprints
  • Events
  • Teach
  • Contribute
  • Volunteer
  • Support us
  • About

Diversity Reading List

Expanding the who, the what, and the how of philosophy

Moral Injury and Relational Harm: Analyzing Rape in Darfur

Posted on April 26, 2016May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Rather than focusing on the legal and political questions that surround genocidal rape, in this paper I treat a vital area of inquiry that has received much less attention: the moral significance of genocidal rape. My aim is to augment existing moral accounts of rape in order to address the specific contexts of genocidal rape. I move beyond understanding rape primarily as a violation of an individual’s interests or agential abilities. The account I offer builds on these approaches (as well as on a pluralist approach), by arguing that rape, as a moral injury, negatively affects the very human dignity of victims. My account also emphasizes the relational harm that marks genocidal rape.

Tagged genocidal rape, genocide, harm, rapeLeave a comment

Enforced Pregnancy, Rape, and the Image of Woman

Posted on April 26, 2016May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: In this essay, Cudd argues that enforced pregnancy constitutes a group harm against women, harming even women who are not forced to carry a fetus to term against their will. In this essay, she develops a theoy of group harm, arguing that forced pregnancy constitutes a similar sort of group harm as rape. Ultimately, she claims that both rape and enforced pregnancy constitute a group harm via degredation of a class (women) and an individual harm via the individual negative effects caused by enforced pregnancy.

Tagged abortion, feminist ethics, forced pregnancy, group harm, rapeLeave a comment

Gay Divorce: Thoughts on the Legal Regulation of Marriage

Posted on April 26, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Although the exclusion of LGBTs from the rites and rights of marriage is arbitrary and unjust, the legal institution of marriage is itself so riddled with injustice that it would be better to create alternative forms of durable intimate partnership that do not invoke the power of the state. Card’s essay develops a case for this position, taking up an injustice sufficiently serious to constitute an evil: the sheltering of domestic violence.

Tagged divorce, domestic violence, marriage, same-sex marriageLeave a comment

Reproductive and Parental Autonomy: An Argument for Compulsory Education

Posted on April 26, 2016May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: In this paper we argue that society should make available reliable information about parenting to everybody from an early age. The reason why parental education is important (when offered in a comprehensive and systematic way) is that it can help young people understand better the responsibilities associated with reproduction, and the skills required for parenting. This would allow them to make more informed life-choices about reproduction and parenting, and exercise their autonomy with respect to these choices. We do not believe that parental education would constitute a limitation of individual freedom. Rather, the acquisition of relevant information about reproduction and parenting and the acquisition of self-knowledge with respect to reproductive and parenting choices can help give shape to individual life plans. We make a case for compulsory parental education on the basis of the need to respect and enhance individual reproductive and parental autonomy within a culture that presents contradictory attitudes towards reproduction and where decisions about whether to become a parent are subject to significant pressure and scrutiny.

Tagged autonomy, education, parenting, reproductionLeave a comment

Aesthetics and the Value of Nature

Posted on April 26, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Like many environmental philosophers, I find the idea that the beauty of wildernesses makes them valuable in their own right and gives us a moral duty to preserve and protect them to be attractive. However, this appeal to aesthetic value encounters a number of serious problems. I argue that these problems can best be met and overcome by recognizing that the appreciation of natural environments and the appreciation of great works of arts are activities more similar than many people have supposed.

Tagged aesthetics, beauty, natural beautyLeave a comment

Individualism, Holism, and Environmental Ethics

Posted on April 26, 2016May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Neoclassical economists have been telling us for years that if we behave in egoistic, individualistic ways, the invisible hand of the market will guide us to efficient and sustainable futures. Many contemporary Greens also have been assuring us that if we behave in holistic ways, the invisible hand of ecology will guide us to health and sustainable futures. This essay argues that neither individualism nor holism will provide environmental sustainability. There is no invisible hand, either in economics or in ecology. Humans have no guaranteed tenure in the biosphere. Likewise there is no philosophical quick fix for environmental problems, either through the ethical individualism of Feinberg, Frankena, and Regan, or through the ecological holism of Callicott and Leopold. The correct path is more complex and tortuous than either of these ways. The essay argues that the best way to reach a sustainable environmental future probably is through a middle path best described as “hierarchical holism.”.

Tagged biology, ecology, environmental ethics, holism, individualismLeave a comment

Neosentimentalism and Environmental Ethics

Posted on April 26, 2016May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Neosentimentalism provides environmental ethics with a theory of value that might be particularly useful for solving many of the problems that have plagued the field since its early days. In particular, a neosentimentalist understanding of value offers us hope for making sense of (1) what intrinsic value might be and how we could know whether parts of the natural world have it; (2) the extent to which value is an essentially anthropocentric concept; and (3) how our understanding of value could be compatible with both a respectable naturalism and a robust normativity.

Tagged environment, ethics, neosentimentalism, valueLeave a comment

On the Moral and Legal Status of Abortion

Posted on April 26, 2016May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Summary: This paper is a response to Thomson’s influential defense of abortion. Warren argues that Thomson is mistaken that if a fetus has full moral rights, then abortion is still morally permissible. Warren, instead, argues that while fetuses participate in genetic humanity, they do not participate in the category of personhood (the category which defines the moral community). For this reason, abortion is always morally permissible and thus ought to be legally permissible.

Tagged abortion, medical ethics, personhood, right to lifeLeave a comment

The Appeal and Danger of a New Refugee Convention

Posted on April 26, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: It is widely held that the current refugee Convention is inadequate with respect to its specification of who counts as a refugee and in its assignment of responsibility concerning refugees to states. At the same time, there is substantial agreement among scholars that the negotiation of a new Convention would lead states to extricate themselves from previously assumed responsibilities rather than sign on to a set of more desirable legal norms. In this paper, I argue that states should ultimately negotiate a new Convention, but that first they must alleviate the institutional and motivational constraints that make progress currently unattainable.

Tagged feasibility, reform, refugeesLeave a comment

Facing the Animal You See in the Mirror

Posted on April 26, 2016June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Introduction: What does it mean to be an animal? About 600 million years ago, certain organic life forms on this planet began to wake up, and to become aware of their surroundings. They found themselves to be hungry, and to be the target of unwelcome interest on the part of others who were hungry. And for both of these reasons, they had to work to take care of themselves. To prod them to do that, nature made many of them capable of pain, and of terror. But some of them were also capable of the opposite feelings of pleasure and security. And out of these various feelings grew feelings of interest and boredom, of grief and joy, of family attachment and hostility to outsiders. These life forms are constructed in such a way that they cannot help but struggle to stay alive, and perhaps even to care about their lives. And a few of them know themselves to be, in spite of that, ephemeral beings. The organic life forms sharing this strange evolutionary adventure are the animals, and you and I are among them. This gives rise to a moral question: How should we interact with the others?

Tagged animal ethics, animal experimentation, logocentrism, vegetarianismLeave a comment

Posts navigation

Older posts
Newer posts

Topics

Aesthetics
(251)
Aesthetic Experience and Judgement
(113)
Aesthetic Normativity and Value
(121)
Artistic Movements
(7)
Artistry and Creativity
(17)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics
(108)
Individual Arts and Crafts
(98)
Metaphysics of Aesthetics
(92)
Epistemology
(304)
Applied Epistemology
(64)
Formal Epistemology
(19)
Metaepistemology
(31)
Social Epistemology
(108)
Standpoint Epistemology
(34)
Theoretical Epistemology
(159)
Metaphilosophy
(188)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Philosophy
(80)
Historiography of Philosophy
(64)
Philosophical Biography
(17)
Philosophical Media and Methodology
(97)
Philosophical Translation and/or Commentary
(21)
Philosophy Education
(10)
The Nature Value and Aims of Philosophy
(30)
Metaphysics
(299)
Causation
(63)
Free Will
(28)
Identity and Change
(57)
Mereology
(7)
Metametaphysics
(7)
Modality
(35)
Ontology Metaontology and Social Ontology
(177)
Properties Propositions and Relations
(24)
Space Time and Space-Time
(28)
Truth and Truthmaking
(23)
Moral Philosophy
(638)
Applied Ethics
(434)
Descriptive Ethics
(6)
Metaethics
(182)
Moral Psychology
(29)
Normative Ethics
(152)
Philosophy of Action
(23)
Philosophy of Language
(159)
Communication
(56)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Language
(63)
Grammar and Meaning
(88)
Language and Mind
(49)
Linguistics
(7)
Metaphysics of Language
(3)
Philosophy of Mind
(481)
Artificial Intelligence
(8)
Cognitive Science
(25)
Consciousness
(61)
Intentionality
(120)
Metaphysics of Mind and Body
(90)
Neuroscience
(23)
Psychiatry
(19)
Psychology
(47)
States and Processes: Affective Behavioral and Cognitive
(364)
Philosophy of Religion
(116)
Afterlife
(9)
Creation
(6)
Deities and their Attributes
(50)
Divination Faith and Miracles
(8)
Environment
(33)
Ethics and Socio-Politics of Religion
(12)
Religious Development Experience and Personhood
(46)
Theodicy
(14)
Philosophy of the Formal Natural and Social Sciences
(431)
Anthropology
(11)
Archaeology and History
(27)
Economics
(13)
Geography
(2)
Life Sciences and Medicine
(112)
Logic and Mathematics
(190)
Physical Sciences
(107)
Psychology
(21)
Sociology
(18)
Political Philosophy
(478)
Equality
(144)
Forms of Government
(73)
Freedom and Rights
(175)
Justice
(307)
Law and Public Policy
(227)
Political Authority and Legitimacy
(45)
Political Economy
(26)
Political Ideologies
(19)
War and Peace
(20)
Social Philosophy
(812)
Class
(80)
Culture
(528)
Disability
(41)
Education
(45)
Environment and Sustainability
(59)
Gender Sex and Sexuality
(362)
Personal and Social Identity
(191)
Race
(208)
Technology and Material Culture
(21)
Work Labor and Leisure
(52)

Read about our new indexing system

Keywords

abortion African philosophy animal ethics art art classification autonomy causation Chinese philosophy colonialism Confucianism consciousness culture desire disability ecology environment ethics experimental philosophy feminism feminist philosophy fiction gender identity imagination justice Kant knowledge logic methodology mind models nature ontology oppression perception portrait race rationality representation responsibility science sex truth virtue women

Figures

Aristotle bell hooks Charles W. Mills Confucius David Hume David Lewis Delia Graff Fara Emilie Du Châtelet G. E. Anscombe G. W. F. Hegel Gottfried Leibniz Gottlob Frege Immanuel Kant Iris Marion Young Iris Murdoch Jennifer Jackson John Rawls Judith Jarvis Thomson Karl Marx Laozi Ludwig Wittgenstein Margaret Macdonald Mary Astell Mary Hesse Mary Midgley Maurice Merleau-Ponty Michel Foucault Philippa Foot Plato René Descartes Rudolf Carnap Simone De Beauvoir Simone Weil Sophie Bọsẹdé Olúwọlé Soran Reader Susan Haack Susan Hurley Val Plumwood Viola Cordova W. V. O. Quine Wang Yangming Wilma Mankiller Xuanzang Zhuangzi Zhu Xi

Our Sponsors

Arts and Humanities Research Council
American Philosophical Association
British Philosophical Association
Marc Sanders FoundationMarc Sanders Foundation
Society for Applied Philosophy
American Society for Aesthetics
MIND AssociationMIND Association
University of St Andrews
Uehiro Oxford InstituteUehiro Oxford Institute
University of Manchester
University of Sheffield
The University of Leeds
The University of Edinburgh
EIDYN
British Society of Aesthetics
The White Rose College of the Arts & Humanities
  • Creative Commons Attribution license

    Unless otherwise stated, all elements of the Diversity Reading List licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Derivatives 4.0 International License
    Hosted by / Web Design by PathForge gemeinnützige UG • Theme: Avant by Kaira

Theme: Avant by Kaira
This site is registered on Toolset.com as a development site.