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35Ethical encounter: the depth of moral meaningPalgrave. 2002.This book shows how our moral concepts are nourished by awe, reverence, and various forms of love. These ways of encountering the world and other human beings inform our sense of good and evil, of justice and injustice, of obligation, of fidelity and betrayal, and of many virtues and vices. In ways moral philosophy commonly misses, this book shows moral understanding is broadened and deepened by what is disclosed only in these forms of encounter.
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115Honour, Community, and Ethical InwardnessPhilosophy 72 (281): 401-415. 1997.Daniel Putman thinks I am right to hold that for Aristotle a concern to appear before one's peers in a certain way is internal to virtue. He takes me to suppose that things are otherwise under a ‘modern concept of virtue’, and says that I am wrong about this. Putman rightly distinguishes between a desire to look good before one's peers which is a substitute for virtue, and a desire to look good to them because, acting virtuously, ‘we genuinely deserve to be viewed that way’. Once this distinctio…Read more
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66The Aristotelian Character of Schiller’s Ethical IdealInternational Studies in Philosophy 22 (1): 21-36. 1990.
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Literature, Morality and the Individual in the Shadows of PostmodernismLiterature & Aesthetics 8 60-77. 1998.
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172Foucault, ethical self-concern and the otherPhilosophia 36 (4): 593-609. 2008.In his later writings on ethics Foucault argues that rapport à soi – the relationship to oneself – is what gives meaning to our commitment to ‘moral behaviour’. In the absence of rapport à soi, Foucault believes, ethical adherence collapses into obedience to rules (‘an authoritarian structure’). I make a case, in broadly Levinasian terms, for saying that the call of ‘the other’ is fundamental to ethics. This prompts the question whether rapport à soi fashions an ethical subject who is unduly sel…Read more
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154Cora Diamond and the Moral ImaginationNordic Wittgenstein Review 5 (1): 55-77. 2016.Over several decades, Cora Diamond has articulated a distinctive way of thinking about ethics. Prompted by a recent critique of Diamond, we elucidate some of the main themes of her work, and reveal their power to reconfigure and deepen moral philosophy. In concluding, we suggest that Diamond’s moral philosophical practice can be seen as one plausible way of fleshing out what Wittgenstein might have meant by his dictum that “ethics is transcendental”.
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90Philosophy, Ethics and a Common Humanity: Essays in Honour of Raimond Gaita (edited book)Routledge. 2012.The work of Raimond Gaita, in books such as _Good and Evil: An Absolute Conception_, _A Common Humanity_ and _The Philosopher’s Dog_, has made an outstanding and controversial contribution to philosophy and to the wider culture. In this superb collection an international team of contributors explore issues across the wide range of Gaita’s thought, including the nature of good and evil, philosophy and biography, the unthinkable, Plato and ancient philosophy, Wittgenstein, the religious dimensions…Read more
Parkville, Victoria, Australia
Areas of Specialization
| Meta-Ethics |
| Value Theory |
| History of Western Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Aesthetics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |