
Dr. Keith Hankins
- Education:
- Brown University, Bachelor of Arts (Latin)
Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Master of Arts
University of Arizona, Ph.D.
Biography
Keith Hankins (Ph.D. University of Arizona, M.A. Rutgers University) is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy and the R. C. Hoiles Endowed Scholar in Business Ethics and Free Enterprise. He is also a faculty member in the Smith Institute for Political Economy and Philosophy. His research interests lie at the intersection of philosophy, economics, and social psychology. He is especially interested in the ethics of economic growth, the costs and benefits diversity, and the norms that mediate collective decision making and our responsibility practices. His recent articles include, "Searching for the Ideal: The Fundamental Diversity Dilemma" (w/ Jerry Gaus in Political Utopias 2017), "Adam Smith's Intriguing Solution to the Problem of Moral Luck" (Ethics 2016), and "When Justice Demands Inequality" (w/ John Thrasher in Journal of Moral Philosophy 2015). Dr. Hankins teaches courses in political philosophy, business ethics, and decision theory (including game theory and social choice theory), as well as courses in the Humanomics program.
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Recent Creative, Scholarly Work and Publications
- “Associative Responsibility and the Possibility of Blameworthiness Without Culpability,” Social Theory and Practice, forthcoming
- "Searching for the Ideal: The Fundamental Diversity Dilemma" with Jerry Gaus, in Kevin Vallier and Michael Weber (eds.), Political Utopias: Contemporary Debates, Oxford University Press, 2017, pp. 175 - 202.