Tony Milligan
Milligan, 2015
Born1966 (age 57–58)
NationalityScottish
Alma materUniversity of Glasgow
InstitutionsKing's College London
Main interests
Love, Iris Murdoch, animal ethics, space policy, civil disobedience

Tony Milligan is a Scottish philosopher who is currently a Senior Researcher in the Philosophy of Ethics with the Cosmological Visionaries project at King's College London. Much of his research concerns the ethics of human attitudes towards outer space, but he has a broader concern with otherness: other people, other places, other creatures, and political opponents. Publications range across Iris Murdoch, the philosophy of love, animal ethics, space policy and civil disobedience.

Education and career

Milligan studied at the University of Stirling, reading philosophy, before going on to the University of Glasgow to study for a doctorate. His PhD thesis was entitled "Iris Murdoch's Romantic Platonism". He then worked as a teaching fellow at the University of Aberdeen's department of philosophy, and then as a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Hull. After his time at Hull, he returned to Aberdeen. He then moved to the department of philosophy at the University of Hertfordshire, where he worked for two years as a lecturer. He then moved to King's College London, where he is currently a researcher with the Cosmological Visionaries project, within the Department of Theology and Religious Studies.[1] Milligan has argued for the environmental protection of other planets, for caution in the use of the finite resources of nearby regions of space, and for the cultivation of a larger than Earthly sense of belonging which has parallels with Indigenous cosmologies.[2]

Selected publications

Monographs
Edited collections

References

  1. ^ "Dr Tony Milligan". King's College London. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  2. ^ Sample, Ian (12 May 2019). "Protect solar system from mining 'gold rush', say scientists". The Guardian.
  3. ^ Reviews:
    • Hill, Jason D. (2016). "Civil disobedience: protest, justification, and the law". Global Change, Peace & Security. 28 (1): 152–154. doi:10.1080/14781158.2016.1114916. S2CID 147044697.
    • Howlett, Charles F. (2014). "Milligan Tony. Civil Disobedience: Protest, Justification, and the Law. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013". Peace & Change. 39 (4): 426–428. doi:10.1111/pech.12082.
    • Vinthagen, Stellan (2015). "Tony Milligan, Civil Disobedience: Protest, Justification, and the Law". Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice. 27 (4): 528–531. doi:10.1080/10402659.2015.1094352. S2CID 151863453.
  4. ^ Review:
    • Perring, Christian (29 May 2012). "Review - Love". Metapsychology Online Reviews. 16 (22).
  5. ^ Reviews: