Philosophers writing about proportionality in self-defense and war will often assume that defensive agents have full knowledge about the threat that they face and the defensive options available to them. But no actual defensive agents possess this kind of knowledge. How, then, should we make proportionality decisions under uncertainty? The natural answer is that we should move from comparing the harm we will do with the good we will achieve to comparing expected harm with expected good. I argue that this simple calculation is flawed, and I begin to develop a more sophisticated account of “subjective proportionality.
Jeff McMahan, Rutgers University, explores proportionality in law, self-defense and acts of war
Published online on 01 December 2018Military operations are taking place with increasing frequency i...
It is often claimed that surveillance should be proportionate, but it is rarely made clear exactly w...
Philosophers writing about proportionality in self-defense and war will often assume that defensive ...
This chapter argues in favor of a political version of the norm of proportionality. Proportionality,...
This chapter is meant to address the extent to which value-based reasoning—as involved in balancing ...
This paper aims at explaining the basic logical structure of the proportionality assessments, under ...
Contrary to the common claim that jus in bello proportionality is an obscure and intractable princip...
The paper addresses a puzzle about the proportionality requirement on self-defense due to L. Alexand...
Contrary to the common claim that jus in bello proportionality is an obscure and intractable princip...
In “just war” thinking, proportionality is a criterion both of going to war and of fighting in it. T...
The rule on proportionality represents the most apparent manifestation of the balance between milita...
Just as every neuron in a biological neural network is a reinforcement learning agent, thus a compon...
This paper aims at explaining the basic logical structure of proportionality assessments, under the ...
This paper aims at explaining the basic logical structure of proportionality assessments, under the ...
Jeff McMahan, Rutgers University, explores proportionality in law, self-defense and acts of war
Published online on 01 December 2018Military operations are taking place with increasing frequency i...
It is often claimed that surveillance should be proportionate, but it is rarely made clear exactly w...
Philosophers writing about proportionality in self-defense and war will often assume that defensive ...
This chapter argues in favor of a political version of the norm of proportionality. Proportionality,...
This chapter is meant to address the extent to which value-based reasoning—as involved in balancing ...
This paper aims at explaining the basic logical structure of the proportionality assessments, under ...
Contrary to the common claim that jus in bello proportionality is an obscure and intractable princip...
The paper addresses a puzzle about the proportionality requirement on self-defense due to L. Alexand...
Contrary to the common claim that jus in bello proportionality is an obscure and intractable princip...
In “just war” thinking, proportionality is a criterion both of going to war and of fighting in it. T...
The rule on proportionality represents the most apparent manifestation of the balance between milita...
Just as every neuron in a biological neural network is a reinforcement learning agent, thus a compon...
This paper aims at explaining the basic logical structure of proportionality assessments, under the ...
This paper aims at explaining the basic logical structure of proportionality assessments, under the ...
Jeff McMahan, Rutgers University, explores proportionality in law, self-defense and acts of war
Published online on 01 December 2018Military operations are taking place with increasing frequency i...
It is often claimed that surveillance should be proportionate, but it is rarely made clear exactly w...