Shimizu, Hayate (2025). Kantianism for the Ethics of Human–Robot Interaction. Philosophy & Technology, 38(3)
Miyahara, Katsunori & Shimizu, Hayate (2025). Instrumental, Intrinsic, and Functional Scarcity. Philosophy & Technology, 38(3) [Commentary].
Shimizu, Hayate (2025). Should We Treat Robots Morally? Towards a Relational Account by Mind-Infusing Animism. AI and Ethics.
Shimizu, Hayate. (2024). Does Living Ethically Make Life Meaningful? An Analysis from a Kantian Perspective, Journal of Applied Ethics and Philosophy 16
Shimizu, Hayate. (2024). Habitus and Emotions in Kant’s Virtue Ethics, Margit Ruffing / Sandra Navalón (eds.): Immanuel Kant, three hundred years later. Tirant Lo Blanch. (ISBN: 9788410811904)
Miyahara, Katsunori & Shimizu, Hayate (forthcoming). Discerning genuine and artificial sociality: a technomoral wisdom to live with chatbots. In Vincent C. Müller, Aliya R. Dewey, Leonard Dung & Guido Löhr (eds.), Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence: The State of the Art. Berlin: SpringerNature.
Shimizu, Hayate. (2024). The role of habitus in Kant’s theory of virtue. Tetsugaku, 76. [Ja]
Shimizu, Hayate. (2024). Kantian ethics and strictness in compliance with duties: Hope and emotion to progress moral strivings. Japanische Kant-Studien, 25, 139–150. [Ja]
Takeshita, Masashi., & Shimizu, Hayate. (2024). Is effective altruism a moral obligation? Justification from consequentialism and Kantian perspectives. Contemporary and Applied Philosophy, 15, 135–171. [Ja]
Shimizu, Hayate. (2024). Kantian dog argument and robot ethics ―A critical examination of the defense of the moral status of robots―. Japanese Student Research Notes of Philosophy of Science, 7. [Ja]
Shimizu, Hayate. (2024). Reason as master, emotion as slave? What Kantian virtues demand. Journal of the Faculty of Humanities and Human Sciences, 19, 1–8.