
Prof Jonathan Pike
Professor Of Philosophy
Biography
Professional biography
Jon Pike joined the Open University in 1998, as Staff Tutor and Lecturer in Philosophy in the South East Region. He has written on his major teaching topic: political philosophy, from level one (on Cultural Exemptions) to the MA in Philosophy which he now co-chair with Derek Matravers. Within political philosophy, Pike has written about political obligation, distributive and global justice, and he maintains an interest in both Marx and Aristotle who were the topic of his doctoral dissertation and first book. But he is also very interested in rules, and breaking them, and in difficult actions, and failing at them. This has lead him to an interest in the philosophy of sport, which is now his main research focus. In this capacty he has worked with the World Anti-Doping Agency, UK Anti-Doping and the International Olympic Committee.
Research interests
His main research interest is in the Philosophy of Sport. Pike is the current Chair of the British Philosophy of Sport Association. He is interested in Doping and anti-Doping, in what - if anything - gives sport its value, and in how far a sport can change and still remain the same sport. He is working on a monograph against conventionalism, and for a version of essentialism as an account of sport.
See Open Research Online for details of his most recent publications.
Publications
Book
Political Philosophy A-Z (2007)
Debates in Contemporary Political Philosophy: An Anthology (2002)
From Aristotle to Marx: Aristotelianism in Marxist Social Ontology (1999)
Book Chapter
Doping, "Mechanical Doping" and Local Essentialism in the Individuation of Sports (2018)
Geras on means and ends: the case for a prefigurative constraint (2012)
Journal Article
Reply to Williams et al.: Fair and Safe Eligibility Criteria for Women's Sport (2024)
Fair and Safe Eligibility Criteria for Women's Sport (2024)
Why ‘Meaningful Competition’ is not fair competition (2023)
[Book Review] Sport and Moral Conflict by William J. Morgan (2023)
Sport, games, and the fluidity of agency (2021)
Safety, fairness, and inclusion: transgender athletes and the essence of Rugby (2021)
Armstrong was a Cheat: A Reply to Eric Moore (2019)
Action theory and the value of sport (2019)
Therapeutic Use Exemptions and the Doctrine of Double Effect (2018)