Randy Cohen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Randy Cohen is a U.S. writer and humorist best known as the author of The Ethicist column in The New York Times Magazine. Cohen's column is syndicated throughout the U.S. and Canada and he also answers listeners' questions on ethics on the National Public Radio radio news program, All Things Considered.
Cohen's book, The Good, The Bad & the Difference: How To Tell Right From Wrong in Everyday Situations is based on his magazine column. Among his earlier books is Diary of a Flying Man, a collection of stories and humor pieces.
Cohen wrote for Slate starting in 1996. At Slate, he became known for "News Quiz", a satiric reader-participation feature which began in February 1998 and ended in November 2000.
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[edit] Title and Qualifications
Cohen's title, according to the National Public Radio website, is "Freelance Ethicist". His biography does not indicate that he has undergone formal training in the fields of ethics or philosophy.
[edit] Cohen's Ethical Beliefs
In a public speech archived as a podcast on the New York Times podcast website, Cohen outlines his personal beliefs about ethics as being ultimately dependent on a person's immediate circumstances, while dismissing the notion that personal moral character might influence an individual's ethics.
Cohen categorically rejects the idea that individual people are inherently good or bad, asserting that in his opinion all individuals have in them the capacity to do good or bad at different times, in different contexts. This is inconsistent with other well-known frameworks of ethical analysis including Kohlberg's stages of moral development, in which individuals are believed to progress over time through progressively elevated levels of ethical insight. In Cohen's view of ethics, individuals are all more or less the same with respect to ethics, but society is often to blame for the very existence of an ethical dilemma, which aligns him (by his own admission) with many of the beliefs of the Society for Ethical Culture; a fundamental premise of this ethical framework is that humans are morally obligated to promote changes in society so all people can lead more ethical lives.
[edit] Television writer
Before becoming a journalist, Cohen wrote extensively for television programs. He shared in three Emmy Awards for his work on Late Night with David Letterman during the mid-1980s. The Late Show newsletter of August 15, 2005 credits him for the August 1990 remote "Crushing Things with a 150-ton Diesel Locomotive", taped in Cromwell, Connecticut. Cohen went on to write for the television program, Ed and TV Nation, sharing in an Emmy Award for the latter in 1995. He was head writer for the Rosie O'Donnell show.
[edit] Personal life
Cohen was born in Charleston, South Carolina, and raised in Reading, Pennsylvania in a Reform Jewish household, but has not been inside a synagogue for 30 years, with the exception of bar mitzvahs and weddings. He attended graduate school at the California Institute of the Arts as a music major studying composition.
He was formerly married to the writer and activist Katha Pollitt, with whom he has a daughter, Sophie Pollitt-Cohen.
[edit] External links
- Biography and Listeners' Ethical Dilemmas, from the NPR website
- New York Times Timestalks Series: [1]
- The Ethicist Archives at the New York Times website
- October 2004 interview with Cohen from a blog about New York City
- December 1999: The Ethicist Who Isn't, a critique of the column from Reason magazine
- Slate:
- March 2002: The 10 best questions never asked of "The Ethicist", a March 2002
- November 2000: No. 500: "End of an Error", Cohen's 500th (and last) "News Quiz"
- November 1997: Crying Through the Tears, about Alan Bennett
- Randy Cohen at the Internet Movie Database