Dr. Heathwood's principle research area is ethics, where he works mainly on well-being and on issues in metaethics. Theories of well-being answer the question, What is ultimately of benefit and harm to us? Most of Dr. Heathwood’s work on this topic concerns desire-based theories of well-being, according to which welfare consists in getting what one wants. Relatedly, Dr. Heathwood also defends desire-based theories of the nature of pleasure and pain. In metaethics, Dr. Heathwood has written on the nature of value and reasons for action, and their relation to desire-based theories of welfare and pleasure. He is also interested in the defensibility of non-naturalist moral realism, and to this end has written on whether there can be ungrounded moral facts and on the nature of irreducible normativity. Dr. Heathwood also has interests in meta-epistemology, the philosophy of religion, and metaphysics.
keywords
ethics, metaethics, axiology, welfare, well-being, value, reasons, desire, desire-satisfaction theory of welfare, preferentism, pleasure and pain, normativity, abortion, philosophy of religion, the ontological argument, philosophy of time, value pluralism
PHIL 1100 - Ethics
Primary Instructor
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Fall 2021 / Spring 2023 / Spring 2024
Introduces students to moral philosophy by having them study and evaluate prominent moral theories and their application to a selection of real-world moral problems. Theories studied may include utilitarianism, rights theory, virtue ethics, social contract theory, divine command theory, cultural relativism, and natural law theory. Social problems covered may include abortion, world poverty, animal rights, reparations for slavery, gun rights, or similar such controversies.
PHIL 1200 - Contemporary Social Problems
Primary Instructor
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Spring 2020 / Spring 2022 / Fall 2022
Examines competing positions in debates over a wide variety of controversial moral, social and political issues. Topics may include: abortion, world poverty, animal rights, immigration, physician-assisted suicide, freedom of religion, hate speech, cloning, income inequality, pornography, gun rights, racial profiling, capital punishment, overpopulation, prostitution, drug legalization, torture. Formerly titled 'Philosophy and Society.'
PHIL 3100 - Ethical Theory
Primary Instructor
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Fall 2018 / Fall 2019
Examines important doctrines and arguments in various areas of theoretical ethics, such as the normative ethics of behavior, axiology, virtue theory, and metaethics. Recommended prerequisite: 6 hours of philosophy course work.
PHIL 4020 - Topics in the History of Philosophy
Primary Instructor
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Spring 2019
Examines a specific philosophical problem over an extended historical period. May be repeated up to 9 total credit hours. Same as PHIL 5020. Recommended prerequisites: 12 hours of philosophy course work including PHIL 3000 and PHIL 3010.
PHIL 5020 - Topics in the History of Philosophy
Primary Instructor
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Spring 2019
Examines a specific philosophical problem over an extended historical period. May be repeated up to 9 total credit hours.
PHIL 5100 - Values Proseminar
Primary Instructor
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Fall 2023
Covers seminal classic texts and/or fundamental topics in analytic ethics and social/political philosophy, including its history.
PHIL 6100 - Seminar in Ethics
Primary Instructor
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Fall 2021 / Spring 2024
Intensive study of selected topics in ethical theory.
PHIL 6940 - Master's Candidate for Degree
Primary Instructor
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Spring 2023 / Spring 2024
Registration intended for students preparing for a thesis defense, final examination, culminating activity, or completion of degree.