Don Loeb
My research focuses on metaethical issues such as the debate over moral
realism, the
methodology of moral reasoning, the function of moral language, and the
nature of the good. I
regularly teach a seminar on contemporary approaches to these issues,
as well as courses in
jurisprudence and political philosophy, and a problems-oriented
introductory class (with an
emphasis on ethics, philosophy of religion and epistemology).
Since 2003, I have been director of the John Dewey Honors
Program in UVM’s College of Arts
and Sciences. For several years I have
taught introductory classes in the program, including “Skepticism:
Moral,
Theological, and Global” and “Contemporary Moral Problems”.
With Alan Wertheimer of Political Science, I am
the author
of a new, two semester course, “Making
Ethical
Choices: Personal, Public, and Professional,” which will be
taken by all
first year students in UVM’s Honors
College,
beginning in the fall of 2004. In
conjunction with this course, Professor Wertheimer and I will also lead
a
faculty summer seminar on some of the same material in August of 2004
Recent publications:
- "Reply to Gill and Sayre-McCord", Forthcoming in W. Sinnott
Armstrong, ed., Ethics and Cognitive
Science
- "The Argument from Moral Experience", Forthcoming in Ethical Theory and Moral Practice
- "Reply to Gerd Gigarenzer", (with Julia Driver),
Forthcoming in W. Sinnot Armstrong, ed., Ethics and Cognitive Science
- “Moral Incoherentism:
How to
Pull a Metaphysical Rabbit Out of a Semantic Hat” (Forthcoming in The Psychology and Biology of Morality,
Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, ed.)
- "Moral Explanations of Moral Beliefs,"
Forthcoming
in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
- "Gastronomic Realism--A Cautionary
Tale" [PDF] The
Journal Of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, 2003
- "Moral Realism and the Argument from
Disagreement," Philosophical Studies,
Vol. 90, No 3, June 1998
- "Must a Moral Irrealist be a
Pragmatist?," American Philosophical Quarterly,
Vol. 33, No. 2, April, 1996
- "Generality and Moral Justification," Philosophy
and Phenomenological Research, Vol. LVI, No. I, March,
1996
- "Full-Information Accounts of
Individual Good," Social Theory and Practice Vol.
21, No. 1, Spring, 1995; reprinted in George Sher, ed., Moral
Philosophy: Selected Readings, 2nd ed.
Book Reviews:
- Ethical Norms, Particular Cases, by
James Wallace, The Philosophical Review,
Vol.111, No. 1 (January, 2002)
-
The Tanner Lectures in Human Values 17,
Grethe
Peterson, ed., Ethics, Vol. 112, No.
1 (October, 2001)
-
Common Values,
by Sisella Bok, Ethics, Vol. 107, No. 4, July, 1997
Appellate Brief:
-
Vacco v. Quill (Assisted
Suicide)
U.S.
Supreme Court, November, 1996
Works in progress include:
"What Possible use could a Moral Irrealist Have for Moral Reasoning?"/
"Why Should I Care What I Value?" (Delivered as lectures; in prep. for Oxford Studies in Metaethics)
Moral Irrealism (Book
Manuscript)
Address:
Don Loeb
Philosophy Department
The University of Vermont
70 S. Williams St.,
Room. 201
Burlington, VT
05401
Phone Numbers:
(w)
(802) 656-3138
(w-front desk) (802) 656-4042
(fax) (802) 656-3133
(h) (802) 862-1290
E-mail address: dloeb@zoo.uvm.edu