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David
Lyons
Professor of Philosophy, Professor of
Law
Office: STH 540
E-mail: dbl@bu.edu
Education: Ph.D., Harvard University
Interests: Philosophy of Law,
Moral and Political Philosophy |
David Lyons came to Boston University in 1995
from Cornell University, where he had been a member
of the Philosophy Department since 1964 and of
the law faculty since 1979. He is currently Professor
of Law as well as Professor of Philosophy at Boston
University. Dr. Lyons is the recipient of numerous
honors and awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship
and three Fellowships from the National Endowment
for the Humanities. He has directed NEH summer
humanities seminars for lawyers, judges, and law
teachers. He is also recipient of the Clark Distinguished
Teaching Award at Cornell University.
His books include:
(ed.) Mill's Utilitarianism: Critical Essays
(1998)
Rights, Welfare and Mill's Moral Theory (1994)
Moral Aspects of Legal Theory: Essays on Law,
Justice, and Political Responsibility (1993)
Spanish edition: Aspectos Morales de la Teoria
del Derecho: Ensayos sobre la ley, la justicia
y la responsabilidad política (Barcelona:
Editorial Gedisa, 1998)
Ethics and the Rule of Law (1984)
Spanish edition: Ética y Derecho (Barcelona:
Editorial Ariel, 1986).
Portuguese language edition: As Regras Morais
e a Ética (Sao Paulo: Editora Papirus,
1990).
Polish edition: Etyka I Rzady Prawa (Warsaw:
ABC, 2000)
(ed.) Rights (1979)
In the Interest of the Governed: a Study in Bentham's
Philosophy of Utility and Law (1973, 1991)
Forms and Limits of Utilitarianism (1965)
He is also the author of many articles
on utilitarianism, Mill, Bentham, rights, and
related topics in moral, legal, and political
philosophy. His recent articles include:
“Legal and Moral Rights,” IVR
Encyclopaedia of Jurisprudence, Legal Theory,
and Philosophy of Law, at http://www.ivr-enc.info/en/article.php?id=125.
“Corrective Justice, Equal Opportunity,
and the Legacy of Slavery and Jim Crow,”
Boston University Law Review 84 (2004)
1375-1404.
"Unfinished Business: Racial Junctures in
US History and Their Legacy," in Justice
in Time: Responding to Historical Injustice,
ed. L.H. Meyer (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2004), pp.
271-298.
"The Moral Opacity of Utilitarianism,"
in Morality, Rules, and Consequences: A Critical
Reader, ed. B. Hooker, E. Mason, and D.E.
Miller (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,
2000), pp.105-120.
"Original Intent and Legal Interpretation,"
Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 24
(1999): 1-26.
"Moral Judgment, Historical Reality, and
Civil Disobedience," Philosophy and Public
Affairs 27 (1998): 31-49.
Dr. Lyons' courses in moral and political philosophy,
and in the philosophy of law, are normally cross-listed
with the School of Law.
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