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5How are we to make sense of this, especially from a moral point of view? Do we simply say, as some have, that if it’s technologically possible, then it’s morally permissible? Or that, since men have been fathering children at ever more advanced ages, women should be permitted to do the same thing? (We might christen this "The Tony Randall Argument," in honor of the seventy-seven year old actor who is a new father.) Or do we say that such births are simply selfish acts that put the desires of the…Read more
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147Philosophy and StyleThe Monist 63 (4): 512-529. 1980.It is a tacit assumption among most contemporary American and British philosophers that the question of style in philosophy is, at most, an issue of peripheral importance. Although it is generally agreed that a well developed sense of style may make a philosopher’s work more accessible and thus be a factor in its acceptance by a wider audience, and although it seems self-evident to many that the apparent inaccessibility of much of continental philosophy is due in part to stylistic vagaries to wh…Read more
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1Kant's Moral PhilosophyIn Ed Zalta (ed.), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2012.
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115Are Appeals to the Emotions Necessarily Fallacious?Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 15 (1): 53-62. 1995.
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97The Virtual Seminar RoomTeaching Philosophy 19 (4): 319-329. 1996.This paper explores various methods of developing a website that caters to the pedagogical needs of an introductory ethics course. Incorporating web sites into the course curriculum allows students to access a range of journal articles, a database for relevant secondary materials, and links to helpful websites. Online educational spaces are also an important pedagogical tool to facilitate student discussion. The site can be use for a discussion board for students within the course and from diffe…Read more
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Resources in ethics on the world wide webIn Terrell Ward Bynum & James H. Moor (eds.), The Digital Phoenix: How Computers are Changing Philosophy, Blackwell. pp. 359. 1998.
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3Emotion, morality, and understandingIn Carol Gibb Harding (ed.), Moral dilemmas and ethical reasoning, Transaction Publishers. 1985.
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133Can a Form of Life Be Wrong?Philosophy 58 (225). 1983.In recent years, a particular doctrine about forms of life has come to be associated with Wittgenstein's name by followers and critics of his philosophy alike. It is not a doctrine which Wittgenstein espoused or even, given his understanding of philosophy, one which he could have accepted; nor is it worthy of acceptance on its own merits. I shall here outline the standard interpretation of Wittgenstein's remarks on forms of life, consider the textual basis for such a reading of Wittgenstein, pre…Read more
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58Martin Heidegger’s Philosophy of Religion (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 18 (4): 490-492. 1978.
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211Ethics: A Pluralistic Approach to Moral TheoryCengage Learning. 2012.ETHICS: A PLURALISTIC APPROACH TO MORAL THEORY, FIFTH EDITION provides a comprehensive yet clear introduction to the main traditions in ethical thought, including virtue ethics, utilitarianism, and deontology. Additionally, the book presents a conceptual framework of ethical pluralism to help students understand the relationship among various theories. Lawrence Hinman, one of today's most respected and accomplished educators in ethics and philosophy education, presents a text that gives students…Read more
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44"Application of Rules in New Situations: A Hermeneutical Study," by Bo Hanson (review)Modern Schoolman 56 (3): 291-291. 1979.
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Using computing technology for professional cooperationIn Terrell Ward Bynum & James H. Moor (eds.), The Digital Phoenix: How Computers are Changing Philosophy, Blackwell. pp. 397. 1998.
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139On the Purity of Our Moral Motives: A Critique of Kant’s Account of the Emotions And Acting for the Sake of DutyThe Monist 66 (2): 251-267. 1983.Rarely has a philosopher demanded such a purity of moral motives. Even when he discusses those “many spirits of so sympathetic a temper that, without any further motive of vanity or self-interest, they find an inner pleasure in spreading happiness around them and can take delight in the contentment of others as their own work,” Kant maintains that, “in such a case an action of this kind, however right and however amiable it may be, still has no genuinely moral worth.” Because the action is done …Read more
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Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |