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35Ethics as Part of Human Natural HistoryGraduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 30 (2): 391-407. 2009.
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127Beyond moral judgmentHarvard University Press. 2007.Wider possibilities for moral thought -- Objectivity revisited: a lesson from the work of J.L. Austin -- Ethics, inheriting from Wittgenstein -- Moral thought beyond moral judgment: the case of literature -- Reclaiming moral judgment: the case of feminist thought -- Moralism as a central moral problem.
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72What is posthumanism? By Cary Wolfe. Minneapolis: University of minnesota press, 2010Hypatia 27 (3): 678-685. 2012.
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26Book review: Margaret urban Walker. Moral contexts. Lanham, md.: Rowman and Littlefield, 2003 (review)Hypatia 20 (4): 220-223. 2000.
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682The New Wittgenstein (edited book)Routledge. 2000.This text offers major re-evaluation of Wittgenstein's thinking. It is a collection of essays that presents a significantly different portrait of Wittgenstein. The essays clarify Wittgenstein's modes of philosophical criticism and shed light on the relation between his thought and different philosophical traditions and areas of human concern. With essays by Stanley Cavell, James Conant, Cora Diamond, Peter Winch and Hilary Putnam, we see the emergence of a new way of understanding Wittgenstein's…Read more
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243. More on Animal Minds: Dogs and ConceptsIn Inside Ethics: On the Demands of Moral Thought, Harvard University Press. pp. 92-120. 2016.
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66. Extending the Argument: Literary Accounts of Moral Kinship between Humans and AnimalsIn Inside Ethics: On the Demands of Moral Thought, Harvard University Press. pp. 203-254. 2016.
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95. A Couple of Competing Views: Foot’s Ethical Naturalism and Wolfe’s PosthumanismIn Inside Ethics: On the Demands of Moral Thought, Harvard University Press. pp. 165-202. 2016.
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Wittgenstein and the Moral LifeFilosoficky Casopis 56 629-632. 2008.[Wittgenstein and the Moral Life]
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245The happy truth: J. L. Austin's how to do things with wordsInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 45 (1). 2002.This article aims to disrupt received views about the significance of J. L. Austin's contribution to philosophy of language. Its focus is Austin's 1955 lectures How To Do Things With Words . Commentators on the lectures in both philosophical and literary-theoretical circles, despite conspicuous differences, tend to agree in attributing to Austin an assumption about the relation between literal meaning and truth, which is in fact his central critical target. The goal of the article is to correct …Read more
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8IndexIn Inside Ethics: On the Demands of Moral Thought, Harvard University Press. pp. 279-288. 2016.