•  76
    Forgiveness and Revenge
    Routledge. 2002.
    Forgiveness and Revenge is a powerful exploration of our attitudes to serious wrongdoings and a careful examination of the values that underlie our thinking about revenge and forgiveness. From adulterous spouses to terrorist factions, we are surrounded by wrongdoing, yet we rarely agree which response is appropriate. The problem of how to respond realistically and sensitively to the wrongs of the past remains a perplexing one. Trudy Govier clarifies our thinking on this subject by examining the …Read more
  •  32
    Nuclear Hardware and Power: The War of Perceptions
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (4). 1987.
    Nations possessing nuclear weapons have seen them as useful for many purposes. These include classic nuclear deterrence, extended nuclear deterrence, the fighting of a nuclear war ‘if deterrence fails,’ and a ‘diplomatic’ use in which the weapons are seen as implements of coercive political power. Concerning all these uses profound ethical questions arise. It is the last use which will be the focus of attention in this paper.I have chosen this subject partly because I believe that it has receive…Read more
  •  266
  •  69
    Logic and Parables: Do These Narratives Provide Arguments?
    with Lowell Ayers
    Informal Logic 32 (2): 161-189. 2012.
    We explore the relationship between argument and narrative with reference to parables. Parables are typically thought to convey a message. In examining a parable, we can ask what that message is, whether the story told provides reasons for the message, and whether those reasons are good reasons. In exploring these questions, we employ as an inves-tigative technique the strategy of reconstructing parables as argu-ments. We then proceed to con-sider the cogency of those argu-ments. One can offer a…Read more
  •  43
    Ad Hominen
    Teaching Philosophy 6 (1): 13-24. 1983.
  •  19
    Two is a Small Number: False Dichotomies Revisited
    In Ralph H. Johnson and David M. Godden J. Anthony Blair Christopher W. Tindale Hans V. Hansen (ed.), Dissensus and the Search for Common Ground, Ossa. 2007.
    Our acceptance of falsely dichotomous statements is often intellectually distorting. It restricts imagination, limits opportunities, and lends support to pseudo-logical arguments. In conflict situations, the presumption that there are only two sides is often a harmful distortion. Why do so many false dichotomies seem plausible? Are all dichotomies false? What are the alternatives, if any, to such fundamental dichotomies as ‘true/false’, ‘yes/no’, ‘proponent/opponent,’ and ‘accept/reject’?
  • Alex C. Michalos, Militarism and the Quality of Life (review)
    Philosophy in Review 11 91-94. 1991.
  •  9
    Can God’s existence be proven by logic? Are computers smart enough to follow rules—or to cheat? What is an out-of-body experience? How can tables be solid when physicists say they’re made of subatomic particles that are only probability functions? Does science depend on trust? What is conscience? Does it come from God? From religious teaching? Social training? Is it rational to pursue your own self-interest? Can we all survive if we do this? In this collection of stories and dialogues Trudy Govi…Read more
  •  10
    Getting Rid of the Big Bad Wolf
    Philosophy 56 (216). 1981.
  •  31
    Dilemmas of Trust
    Carleton University Press. 1998.
    Trust facilitates communication, love, friendship, and co-operation and is fundamentally important to human relationships and personal development. Using examples from daily life, interviews, literature, and film, Govier describes the role of trust in friendship and in family relationships as well as the connection between self-trust, self-respect, and self-esteem. She examines the reasons we trust or distrust others and ourselves, and the expectations and vulnerabilities that accompany those at…Read more
  •  32
    Presuppositions, Conditions, and Consequences
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 1 (4). 1972.
    An analysis of necessary condition and presupposition reveals that, as logical relations, these notions are basically similar to each other and different from the notion of entailment or other ‘if-then’ relations of logical consequence. Both necessary condition and presupposition seem to be two-directional in a rather peculiar way. Appreciating this is helpful in interpreting philosophers such as Kant and Strawson who have relied extensively on these relations in constructing the philosophical a…Read more
  •  75
    In the context of redressing wrongs of the past, the importance of acknowledgement is often urged. It figures significantly, for instance, in the final report of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission and in the 1996 Canadian Royal Commiss ion Report on Aboriginal Peoples. In both documents a central theme is that acknowledging wrongs of the past is a key first step towards healing and reconciliation. Several recent statements about public apology also urge that moral apologies are s…Read more
  •  38
    How can we respond in the aftermath of wrongdoing? How can social trust be restored in the wake of intense political conflict? In this challenging work, philosopher Trudy Govier explores central dilemmas of political reconciliation, employing illustrative material from Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Australia, Canada, Peru, and elsewhere. Govier stresses that reconciliation is fundamentally about relationships. Whether through means of truth commissions, apologies, community processes, or c…Read more
  •  47
    Belief, Values, and the Will
    Dialogue 15 (4): 642-663. 1976.
    In this paper I shall presuppose that: logic and epistemology are disciplines which supply us with normative statements pertaining to states of belief. as such, logic and epistemology have implications concerning what we ought and ought not to believe. as such, logic and epistemology presuppose that there is some sense in which a person controls what he believes — some sense in which ‘can’ has a place in contexts where one comes to believe things.
  •  5
    Applying Ethics (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 6 (1): 54-56. 1983.
  •  48
    Is Conscientiousness Always—or Ever—a Virtue?
    Dialogue 11 (2): 241-251. 1972.
    On most views of the nature of moral judgments, it is possible for a person to be mistaken in the belief that it is right to act in a certain way. When someone believes that it is right to do something, does that thing on the basis of such a belief, and yet in so doing commits deeds which are wrong by moral standards other than his own, we do not quite know whether to praise him for his conscientiousness while condemning his actions. He acts according to his conscience and does what he believes …Read more
  •  54
    Trust and the problem of national reconciliation
    with Wilhelm Verwoerd
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 32 (2): 178-205. 2002.
    The authors propose a conception of national reconciliation based on the building or rebuilding of trust between parties alienated by conflict. It is by no means obvious what reconciliation between large groups of people amounts to in practice or how it should be understood in theory. Lack of conceptual clarity can be illustrated with particular reference to postapartheid South Africa, where reconciliation between whites and blacks was a major goal of the Mandela government and the Truth and Rec…Read more
  •  45
    Analogies and Missing Premises
    Informal Logic 11 (3). 1989.
  •  7
    Book reviews (review)
    with Charles Arthur Willard, Erik C. W. Krabbe, Lita Lundquist, Douglas Walton, and Peter Jan Schellens
    Argumentation 6 (4): 473-493. 1993.
  •  112
    Forgiveness and the Unforgivable
    American Philosophical Quarterly 36 (1). 1999.