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Stephen Bero

Assistant Professor
Philosophy

Biography

My research interests lie moral philosophy, moral psychology, philosophy of emotions, and philosophy of law. A central focus of my work is the ways in which our temperaments—our basic attachments, qualities of character, and emotional dispositions—shape our ethical lives, including our legal and other interpersonal practices. I've written about shame, taking things personally, taking responsibility, reverence for the law, and the relation between mercy and the law of tort, among other things.

Publications

  • “Creon’s Revenge: Lawfulness and the Emergence of Law,” in Bernard Williams: From Responsibility to Law and Jurisprudence, edited by Veronica Rodriguez-Blanco and Daniel Peixoto Murata, (Hart/Bloomsbury, forthcoming)
  • “On the Possibility and the Form of Acquired Rights to External Things,” Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence(forthcoming book symposium issue on Ernest Weinrib’s Reciprocal Freedom)
  • “Mercy in Tort: An Introduction,” Texas Law Review 102(7): 1599 (2024)
  • “Don’t Take It Personally,” in Oxford Studies in Agency and Responsibility vol. 8, edited by Santiago Amaya, David Shoemaker, and Manuel Vargas, 201 (OUP 2024) DOI: 
  • “Shame and the Ethical in Williams” (with Aness Kim Webster), in Morality and Agency: Themes from Bernard Williams, edited by András Szigeti & Matthew Talbert, 62 (OUP 2022) DOI: 
  • “The Problem of Over-Inclusive Offenses: A Closer Look at Duff on Legal Moralism and Mala Prohibita” (with Alex Sarch), Criminal Law and Philosophy 14: 395 (2020) DOI: 
  • “Holding Responsible and Taking Responsibility,” Law and Philosophy 39(3): 263 (2020) DOI: 
  • “The Audience in Shame,” Philosophical Studies 177(5): 1283 (2020) DOI: 
  • Review of Ignorance of Law by Douglas Husak, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books (March 2017)