Ethics : An international journal of social, political, and legal philosophy.
- Chicago : The university of Chicago Press.
Internalism and speaker relativism James Dreier--pp. 6-26. Moral conflicts and ethical relativism Judith Wagner DeCew--pp. 27-41. The misfortunes of virtue J. B. Schneewind--pp. 42-63. Moral conflicts and political consensus Amy Gutman and Dennis Thompson--pp. 64-88. Justifying the State David Schmidtz--pp. 89-102. Altruism and the theory of rational action: rescuers of jews in Nazi Europe Kristen R. Monroe, Michael C. Barton, and Ute Klingemann--pp. 103-122. Some moral issues in risk assessment Carl F. Cranor--pp. 123-143. Patriotism is like racism Paul Gomberg--pp. 144-150. Freedom, consensus, and equality in collective decision making Thomas Christiano--pp. 151-181. Introduction Michael J. Zimmerman--pp. 236. Responsibilty, agent-caution, and freedom: an eighteenth-century view William L. Rowe--pp. 237-257. Responsibility and inevitability John Martin Fisher and Mark Ravizza--pp. 258-278. Varieties of moral worth and moral worth credit Holly M. Smith--pp. 279-303. Responsible action and virtuous character Robert Audi--pp. 304-321. Toward a theory of seccession Allen Buchanan--pp. 322-342. Liberalism and individual positive John Christman--pp. 343-359. Self-constraint versus self-liberation Tyler Cowen--pp. 360-373. Rational revenge Alan P. Hamlin--pp. 374-381. The structure of aristotelian happiness T. H. Irwin--pp. 382-391. Morality as interpretation Joseph Raz--pp. 392-405. Decision-theoretic consequentialism and the nearest and dearest objection Frank Jackson--pp. 461-482. Why it is wrong to be always guided by the best: consequentialism and friendship Neera Badhwar Kapur--pp. 483-504. Taking "free action" too seriously W. J. Norman