Archive for March, 2009

Welcome to My Web Page!

March 24, 2009

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This site contains information about my academic career and research interests.   My CV is available here.   PubMed entries here.

If you are looking for my blog “In Search of Enlightenment” please click here.

Detailed research statement *here*

I am a political theorist and philosopher and received my PhD from the University of Bristol in England in 1999.  I have published 4 books (two edited volumes and two single-authored books) and numerous articles in a variety of different journals.  My research interests are interdisciplinary and include normative issues in politics, philosophy, law and medicine.  My publications have appeared in journals such as Political Studies, American Journal of Bioethics, Canadian Journal of Political ScienceBritish Medical Journal, Nature’s EMBO Reports, University of Toronto Law Journal, Bioethics, Public Health Ethics, and Philosophy of the Social Sciences.

In July 2008 I joined the Department of Political Studies at Queen’s University as an Associate Professor and Queen’s National Scholar.  Before coming to Queen’s I was Associate Professor of Political Science (Cross-Appointed with Philosophy) at Waterloo University.  I also spent a year as a Research Fellow in the Dept of Politics and International Relations at Oxford University and as a Visitor in Oxford’s Program on the Ethics of the New Biosciences.

In the more distant past, I held full-time academic appointments in the Dept of Government at Manchester University, the Dept of Political Science and International Studies at Birmingham University and the Dept of Philosophy at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland.

My research has focused on a variety of different topics, including:  genetics and justice; Marx’s theory of historical materialism; the moral imperative to retard human aging; a critique of ideal theory; the “dialogical model” of judicial review; virtue jurisprudence; the application of virtue ethics to different practical dilemmas; Darwinian medicine and positive psychology.

Below you will find further details about my research and interests.

In 2009-10 I will be teaching POLS 250 An Introduction to Political Theory.  Students interested in that course can view the trailer here.

Publications

March 24, 2009

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Books

(1)  An Introduction to Contemporary Political Theory (London: Sage Publications, 2004).

(2)  Contemporary Political Theory: A Reader (London: Sage Publications, 2004).

(3)  Justice, Democracy and Reasonable Agreement (Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007)

(4)  Virtue Jurisprudence (co-edited with Lawrence Solum) (Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan, 2008 )

Publications (by discipline)

POLITICAL SCIENCE

● “Justice in Ideal Theory: A Refutation”  Political Studies Volume 55, 2007, pp. 844–864.

● “Dualism, Incentives and the Demands of Rawlsian Justice” Canadian Journal of Political Science, Vol. 38(3), Sept. 2005, pp. 675-95.

● “Making Deliberative Democracy a More Practical Political Ideal” European Journal of Political Theory, Vol. 4(2), 2005, pp. 200-208.

“Taxation and Distributive Justice” Political Studies Review, Vol. 2, 2004, pp. 185-197.

● “Incentives and the Natural Duties of Justice”, Politics, Vol. 20(1), 2000, pp. 19-24.

● “Does Rawls Support the Procedural Republic?” Politics, Vol. 19, No. 1, February 1999, pp. 29-35.

● “Neutrality, Toleration and Reasonable Agreement” in D. Castiglioni and C. Mackinnon, eds., Toleration, Neutrality and Democracy (Amsterdam: Kluwer, 2003).

● “Deliberative Democracy and Nanotechnology” Nanoethics: Examining the Societal Impact of Nanotechnology (NJ:  John Wiley and Sons Inc.) edited by Fritz Allhoff, Patrick Lin, James Moor and John Weckert.


MEDICINE

● “Towards a More Inclusive Vision of the Medical Sciences” QJM: An International Journal of Medicine (forthcoming)

● “Has the Time Come to Take on Time Itself?” British Medical Journal, Vol. 337, 2008, pp. 147-48.

● “Preparing for Our Enhanced Future” Journal of Medical Licensure and Discipline Vol 93(2), 2007, pp. 12-18.

SCIENCE

● “Framing the Inborn Aging Process and Longevity Science” (forthcoming) Biogerontology

●  “Why Aging Research?” (forthcoming) Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences

●  “A Tale of Two Strategies:  The Moral Imperative to Tackle Ageing” Nature’s EMBO Reports, Vol. 9(7), 2008, pp. 592-95. [PDF available for free via PubMed]

● “Sufficiency, Justice and the Pursuit of Health- Extension” Rejuvenation Research Vol. 10(4), 2007, pp. 513-20.

● “Genes and Distributive Justice” Nature Encyclopedia of the Human Genome 2003.

BIOETHICS

● “Equality and the Duty to Retard Human Aging” (forthcoming) Bioethics

●  “PGD, Reproductive Freedom and Deliberative Democracy” (forthcoming) Journal of Medicine and Philosophy

● “Aging Research, Priorities and Aggregation” Public Health Ethics , Vol. 1(3), 2008, pp. 258-67.

● “3 Wishes” Journal of Evolution and Technology, Vol. 20(1), 2008, pp. 23-28.

●  “The Case for Re-thinking Incest Laws” Journal of Medical Ethics Vol. 34:e2, 2008, pp. 1-2.

●“Genetic Justice Must Track Genetic Complexity” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, Vol. 17(1), 2008, pp. 45-53.

● “Virtue Ethics and Prenatal Genetic Enhancement” Studies in Ethics, Law, and Technology Vol. 1(1), 2007, pp. 1-13.

● “Justice in the Genetically Transformed Society” Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, Vol. 15(1), 2005, pp. 91-99.

● “Genes and Equality” Journal of Medical Ethics, Vol. 30(4), 2004, pp. 587-592.

● “The Genetic Difference Principle” American Journal of Bioethics, Vol. 4(2), 2004, W21-28.

PHILOSOPHY

● “Gene Patents and Justice” Journal of Value Inquiry Vol. 41 (2-4), 2007, pp. 147-163.

● “Historical Materialism and Supervenience” Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Vol. 35(4), 2005, pp. 420-446.

● “A Challenge to Brink’s Metaphysical Egoism” Res Publica: A Journal of Legal and Social Philosophy, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2003, pp. 243-256.

● “Genetic Intervention and the New Frontiers of Justice” Canadian Philosophical Review XLI, 2002, pp. 139-154.

● “Justice and a Citizens’ Basic Income”, Journal of Applied Philosophy 16(3), 1999, pp. 283-296.

LAW

●  “The Institutional Theory of Legal Interpretation” University of Toronto Law Journal, Vol. 58(2), 2008, pp. 217-32.

● “Civic Liberalism and the ‘Dialogical Model’ of Judicial Review” Law and Philosophy Vol. 25(5), 2006, pp. 489-532.  Reprinted in edited volume Virtue Jurisprudence.

● “The Social Character of Freedom of ExpressionCanadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 14(2), 2001, pp. 261-71.

● “Public Reason, Neutrality and Civic Virtue” Ratio Juris: An International Journal of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law, 12(1), 1999, pp. 11-25.

MULTIMEDIA

March 24, 2009
lecture
* to access these  the username is: farrelly; password: politics
“3 Wishes” Video (Feb. 2009)  *NEW*
“No biological problem is fully solved until both the proximate and evolutionary causation has been elucidated”
Ernst Mayr The Growth of Biological Thought (1982)
 
“Science marks the emancipation of mind from devotion to customary practices and makes possible the systematic pursuit of new ends.  It is the agency of progress in action…. Science has familiarized men with the idea of development, taking effect practically in persistent gradual amelioration of the estate of our common humanity”.
John Dewey Democracy and Education (1916)
 
“No gentlemen, the difficult thing is not to escape death, I think, but to escape wickedness- that is much more difficult, for that runs faster than death.  And now I, being slow and old, have been caught by the slower one; but my accusers, being clever and quick, have been caught by the swifter, badness.  And now I and they depart, I, condemned by you to death, but these, condemned by truth to depravity and injustice.  I abide by my penalty, they by theirs.  Perhaps this was to be so, and I think it is fair enough.”
Socrates  (399 B.C.) addressing the Athenian jury which condemned him to death for questioning their beliefs (as told by Plato in The Apology)

Let no one when young delay to study philosophy, nor when he is old grow weary of his study…And the man who says that the age of philosophy has either not yet come or has gone by is like the man who says that the age for happiness has not yet come to him, or has passed away… We must then mediate on the things that make our happiness, seeing that when that is with us we have all, but when it is absent we do all to win it.

Epicurus, 300 BC

I wish I had the voice of Homer
To sing of rectal carcinoma
Which kills a lot more chaps in fact,
Than were bumped off when Troy was sacked.

J.B.S. Haldane (1892-1964) Geneticist and evolutionary biologist who died of cancer.

My Favorite Blog Posts

March 24, 2009