Johann Frick
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JOHANN FRICK Department of Philosophy (609) 258-9494 (office) 212 1879 Hall (857) 399-5709 (cell) Princeton University (609) 258-1502 (fax) Princeton, New Jersey 08544- [email protected] 1006 AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION Normative Ethics; Practical Ethics (including Bioethics); Political Philosophy. AREAS OF COMPETENCE Metaethics; Philosophy of Law; Metaphysics; Philosophy of Action; Wittgenstein. EMPLOYMENT Feb 2015 – Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy and the Present Center for Human Values, Princeton University. Feb 2014 – Instructor in the Department of Philosophy and the Center for Jan 2015 Human Values, Princeton University. EDUCATION 2008 - 2014 Ph.D. in Philosophy, Harvard University. • Dissertation: “Making People Happy, Not Making Happy People: A Defense of the Asymmetry Intuition in Population Ethics”; Committee: T.M. Scanlon, Frances Kamm, Derek Parfit. 2005 - 2008 BPhil degree in Philosophy, Merton College, Oxford University. • Distinction in both the written examinations and the BPhil thesis. • BPhil thesis: “Morality and the Problem of Foreseeable Non- Compliance”; advisor: Derek Parfit. • Specialization in Moral Philosophy (tutor: Ralph Wedgwood); Political Philosophy (tutors: Joseph Raz and John Tasioulas); Wittgenstein (tutor: Stephen Mulhall). 2006 - 2007 Visiting student at the École Normale Supérieure (ENS) in Paris. • Courses and seminars at the ENS, the Institut Jean Nicod, and the Collège de France; tutor: François Recanati. 2002 - 2005 BA (Hons.) degree in Philosophy, Politics & Economics, St. John’s College, Oxford University. • First Class Honours in the Final Examinations (June 2005). • Distinction in the Preliminary Examination (June 2003). PUBLICATIONS “Contractualism and Social Risk”, Philosophy & Public Affairs 43.3 (2015): 175-223. • Winner of the American Philosophical Association’s Gregory Kavka/University of California, Irvine Prize in Political Philosophy, 2017. • Nominated for the Philosopher’s Annual 2015. “Future Persons and Victimless Wrongdoing” in Markus Rüther and Sebastian Muders (eds.), Derek Parfits Philosophie in der Diskussion (Hamburg: Felix Meiner Verlag, forthcoming). “Treatment versus Prevention in the Fight Against HIV/AIDS and the Problem of Identified versus Statistical Lives” in Glenn Cohen, Norman Daniels, and Nir Eyal (eds.), Identified versus Statistical Lives: An Interdisciplinary Perspective (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015). “Uncertainty and Justifiability to Each Person: Response to Fleurbaey and Voorhoeve”, in Nir Eyal, Samia Hurst, Ole Norheim and Dan Wikler (eds.), Inequalities in Health: Concepts, Measures, and Ethics (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013). “Prioritarisme”. With Ekédi Mpondo-Dika. In V. Bourdeau and R. Merrill (eds.), Dictionnaire de théorie politique (2008): http://www.dicopo.fr/spip.php?article100. IN PREPARATION “What We Owe to Hypocrites: Contractualism and the Speaker-Relativity of Justification”. (Revise and Resubmit at Philosophy & Public Affairs). “The Procreation Asymmetry and the Specter of Antinatalism” (invited paper for a special issue of the Canadian Journal of Philosophy on Ethics and Future Generations, edited by Rahul Kumar). “Probabilistic Causation, Moral Responsibility, and the Problem of Aggregate Effects” (invited paper for a special issue of Ethical Theory and Moral Practice on Risk and Moral theory, edited by Sven Ove Hansson and Sune Holm). “Climate Change, Population Size, and Existential Risk” (invited chapter for a volume on Philosophy and Climate Change, edited by David Plunkett, Tristram McPherson, and Mark Budolfsen). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”. “On the Survival of Humanity”. WORKS IN PROGRESS “National Partiality, Immigration, and the Problem of Double-Jeopardy”. 2 “Self-Knowledge and Structural Rationality”. “Context-Dependent Betterness and the Mere Addition Paradox”. “The Deep Problem of Pluralism”. “Medical Resource Allocation Behind a Natural Veil of Ignorance”. “Reshuffling the Deck: Why the ‘Natural Lottery’ Isn’t Enough”. TALKS AND PRESENTATIONS “TBD”, General Colloquium, NYU Department of Philosophy (April 2017, scheduled). “TBD”, Conference on Normative Ethics and Welfare Economics, Harvard University (October 2016, scheduled). “TBD”, Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto (October 2016, scheduled). “TBD”, Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto (October 2016, scheduled). “On the Survival of Humanity”, Bechtel Workshop on Moral and Political Philosophy, University of Toronto (June 2016). “Climate Change, Population Size, and Existential Risk”, Conference on Philosophy and Climate Change, Princeton University (April 2016). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, Workshop on Deontological Approaches to Population Ethics, Institute for Futures Studies, Stockholm (April 2016). “National Partiality, Immigration, and the Problem of Double-Jeopardy”, conference in honor of T.M. Scanlon’s retirement, Harvard University (April 2016). “On the Survival of Humanity”, LSR Faculty Seminar, Center for Human Values, Princeton University (April 2016). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, Eastern APA meeting, Washington, DC (January 2016). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, MIT Political Theory Workshop (November 2015). “Contractualism and Social Risk: How to Count the Numbers Without Aggregating”, Workshop on “The Ethics of Social Risk”, Centre de recherche en éthique, Université de Montréal (September 2015). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, MANCEPT Conference, panel on “New Work on Population Ethics”, University of Manchester (September 2015). “Contractualism and Social Risk: How to Count the Numbers Without Aggregating”, Moral Philosophy Seminar, University of Oxford (June 2015). “Contractualism and Social Risk”, LSR Faculty Seminar, Center for Human Values, 3 Princeton University (April 2015). “Treatment vs Prevention for HIV/AIDS and the Problem of Identified vs Statistical Lives”, Human Values Forum, Princeton (April 2015). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, Workshop on “Time Bias and Future Planning”, Vancouver (March 2015). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, Princeton Workshop on Normative Philosophy (March 2015). “What We Owe to the Hypocrites: Contractualism and the Speaker-Relativity of Justification”, Swarthmore College (February 2015). “Treatment vs Prevention for HIV/AIDS and the Problem of Identified vs Statistical Lives”, Bioethics Seminar, Harvard University (December 2014). “Contractualism and Social Risk: How to Count the Numbers Without Aggregating”, Early Career Ethics Workshop, NYU (October 2014). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, Early Career Ethics Workshop, NYU (March 2014). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, LSR Faculty Seminar, Center for Human Values, Princeton University (March 2014). “Treatment vs Prevention for HIV/AIDS and the Problem of Identified vs Statistical Lives”, Bioethical Reflections in Honor of Dan Brock (retirement conference), Harvard University; respondent: Nir Eyal (November 2013). “Treatment vs Prevention for HIV/AIDS and the Problem of Identified vs Statistical Lives”, “Talk Shop”, Harvard University (November 2013). “Conditional Reasons and the Procreation Asymmetry”, Moral and Political Philosophy Workshop, Harvard University (September 2013). “Contractualism and Social Risk: How to Count the Numbers Without Aggregating”, Merton Workshop on Applied Formal Ethics, Oxford University (July 2013). “Treatment vs Prevention for HIV/AIDS and the Problem of Identified vs Statistical Lives”, Applied Ethics Discussion Group, Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, University of Oxford (June 2013). “What We Owe to the Hypocrites: Contractualism and the Speaker-Relativity of Justification”, Princeton University (February 2013). “How to Defend the Intuition of Neutrality in Population Ethics”, Moral and Political Philosophy Workshop, Harvard University (November 2012). “Contractualism and Social Risk: How to Count the Numbers Without Aggregating”, Fellows Workshop, Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University (April 2012). “How to Defend the Intuition of Neutrality in Population Ethics”, Work in Progress Lunch, Harvard University (May 2012). 4 “What We Owe to the Hypocrites: Contractualism and the Speaker-Relativity of Justification”, Princeton Graduate Conference in Political Theory (March 2012). “On the Survival of Humanity”, Moral and Political Philosophy Workshop, Harvard University (February 2012). “On the Survival of Humanity”, Fellows Workshop, Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University (November 2011). “Contractualism and Social Risk: How to Count the Numbers Without Aggregating”, Moral and Political Philosophy Workshop, Harvard University (October 2011). “What We Owe to the Hypocrites: Contractualism and the Speaker-Relativity of Justification”, Fellows Workshop, Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University (October 2011). “On the Survival of Humanity”, Applied Ethics Discussion Group, Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, Oxford (July 2011). “Probabilistic Causation and the Problem of Aggregate Effects”, Ockham Society, Oxford University (June 2011). “Health Resource Allocation Behind a Natural Veil of Ignorance”, Guest Lecture in Dan Wikler’s undergraduate course on Bioethics, Harvard University (March 2011). “What We Owe to the Hypocrites: Contractualism and the Speaker-Relativity of Justification”, Yale University (February 2011). “How to Defend the Intuition of Neutrality