•  198
    Kripke's skeptical interpretation of Wittgenstein's project in the Philosophical Investigations attributes to Wittgenstein a radical skepticism about the objectivity of rules and thus the meanings of words and the existence of language as well as a skepticism about the truth conditions underlying our alleged facts about the world. Kripke then contends that Wittgenstein solves this skeptical paradox by committing himself to what I shall call a Communitarian View of language. There are a number of…Read more
  •  87
    A Fine Effort to Square a CircleOrganization Ethics in Health Care
    with Lisa H. Newton, Edward M. Spencer, Ann E. Mills, and Mary V. Rorty
    Business Ethics Quarterly 12 (4): 539. 2002.
  •  115
    Introduction
    with Robert Allan Cooke and Paul F. Camenisch
    Journal of Business Ethics 4 (4). 1985.
  •  85
    Responsibility, Rights and Welfare: The Theory of the Welfare State
    Philosophical Books 30 (4): 250-251. 1989.
  •  87
    10.5840/jbee20118114
    with Laura P. Hartman, Jenny Mead, and Danielle Christmas
    Journal of Business Ethics Education 1 (1): 199-230. 2000.
  •  127
    Exporting Mental Models
    Business Ethics Quarterly 10 (1): 353-362. 2000.
    The most serious ethical challenge facing multinational corporations in the next century is their exportation of the mental model of Western-style capitalism. This model promises that industrialized free enterprise in a free trade global economy, where businesses and entrepreneurs can pursue their interests competitively without undue regulations or labor restrictions, will produce growth and well-being, i.e., economic good, in every country or community where this phenomenon is allowed to opera…Read more
  •  285
    Moral Imagination and the Search for Ethical Decision-Making in Management
    The Ruffin Series of the Society for Business Ethics 1 75-98. 1998.
  •  104
    Report on business ethics in north America
    with Thomas W. Dunfee
    Journal of Business Ethics 16 (14): 1589-1595. 1997.
    Although many challenges remain, business ethics is flourishing in North America. Prominent organizations give annual business ethics awards, investments in socially screened mutual funds are increasing, ethics officers and corporate ombudspersons are more common and more influential, and new ideas are being tested in practice. On the academic side, two major journals specializing in business ethics are well-established and other major journals often include articles on business ethics and new o…Read more
  •  116
    Wittgenstein and moral realism
    Journal of Value Inquiry 26 (3): 381-393. 1992.
    I argue, contra Sabina Lovibond, that one cannot defend a viable form of moral realism from the perspective of linguistic conventionalism. Appealing to the later Wittgenstein, I argue that Wittgenstein's alleged linguistic conventionalism rests on the objective ground of the notion of a rule. While Wittgenstein acknowledges that the subjective and social context out of which we operate precludes getting at reality independent of a perspective, neither is he an anti-realist nor does he replace tr…Read more
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