Showing results for "jay wallace"
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2027
EN
The perfect gift for dads, grandpas, special someones, and golfers galore!Packed with the goofiest, funniest, and most pun-tastic jokes, Putt-erly Hilarious Golf Jokes for Dads is a hole-in-one for anyone who can't get enough of the fairway. From zippy one-liners to side-splitting knock-knocks, these jokes will have golf fanatics rolling on the green, no matter if they make a birdie or a bogey. With jokes as versatile as your favorite club, it's t...
$12.95 USD
Available Oct 14, 2027
Kindred Verse
Poems Inspired by Anne of Green Gables
2021
EN
This collection of beautiful, whimsical poems and photographs, invites readers into the world of a young woman, known across the world, Anne of Green Gables, of Prince Edward Island, Canada. The author reflects in her poems the magic of Anne stories published by L.M. Montgomery in eight Anne books and how the stories and the place reshaped her own sense of possibility. The poems are magical, lyrical and enticing. Readers will long to walk the woods, the beach, look out from Anne's ...
$5.99 USD
1998
EN
R. Jay Wallace advances a powerful and sustained argument against the common view that accountability requires freedom of will. Instead, he maintains, the fairness of holding people responsible depends on their rational competence: the power to grasp moral reasons and to control their behavior accordingly. He shows how these forms of rational competence are compatible with determinism. At the same time, giving serious consideration to incompatibilist concerns, Wallace develops a compelling...
$35.99 USD
- Series -
- Carl G. Hempel Lecture Series
2019
EN
Accessible
A new way of understanding the essence of moral obligationThe Moral Nexus develops and defends a new interpretation of morality—namely, as a set of requirements that connect agents normatively to other persons in a nexus of moral relations. According to this relational interpretation, moral demands are directed to other individuals, who have claims that the agent comply with these demands. Interpersonal morality, so conceived, is the domain of what we owe ...
$27.99 USD
The View from Here
On Affirmation, Attachment, and the Limits of Regret
2018
EN
Must we always later regret actions that were wrong for us to perform at the time? Can there ever be good reason to affirm things in the past that we know were unfortunate? In this original work of moral philosophy, R. Jay Wallace shows that the standpoint from which we look back on our lives is shaped by our present attachments-to persons, to the projects that imbue our lives with meaning, and to life itself. Through a distinctive "affirmation dynamic", these attachments commit us to affi...
$37.79 USD
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2010
EN
There has recently been a good deal of interest in moral sentimentalism, but most of that interest has been exclusively either in metaethical questions about the meaning of moral terms or in normative issues about benevolence and/or caring and their place in morality. In Moral Sentimentalism Michael Slote attempts to deal with both sorts of issues and to do so, primarily, in terms of the notion or phenomenon of empathy. Hume sought to do something like this over two centuries ago,...
$34.19 USD
A Theory of Freedom
From the Psychology to the Politics of Agency
2013
EN
This innovative approach to freedom starts from an account of what we mean by describing someone, in a psychological vein, as a free subject. Pettit develops an argument as to what it is that makes someone free in that basic sense; and then goes on to derive the implications of the approach for issues of freedom in political theory. Freedom in the subject is equated with the person's being fit to be held responsible and to be authorized as a partner in interaction.This book is uniq...
$21.00 USD
2010
EN
This book is about fundamental questions in normative ethics. It begins with the idea that we often respond to ethical theories according to how principled or pragmatic they are. It clarifies this contrast and then uses it to shed light on old debates in ethics, such as debates about the rival merits of consequentialist and deontological views. Using the idea that principled views seem most appealing in dilemmas of acquiescence, it goes on to develop a novel theory of pattern-based reasons...
$77.99 USD
Dewey
A Beginner's Guide
- Series -
- Beginner's Guides
2008
EN
A ground-breaking introduction to one of America's most prominent philosophersAn icon of philosophy and psychology during the first half of the 20th century, Dewey is known as the father of Functional Psychology and a pivotal figure of the Pragmatist movement as well as the progressive movement in education.This concise and critical look at Dewey’s work examines his unique take on morality, art, and religion, his naturalistic approach to science and psychol...
$5.99 USD
How Should We Live?
A Practical Approach to Everyday Morality
2014
EN
A "lucid, careful, tenacious, and always accessible" inquiry into practical morality for everyday life by the author of The Roots of Evil ( Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews).For centuries, moral philosophers have sought a single, overriding ideal that should guide everyone, always, everywhere. And after centuries of debate we're no closer to arriving at one. In How Should We Live?, philosopher John Kekes offers a refreshing alternative, e...
$12.99 USD
or Free with Kobo PlusKnowledge and Virtue in Teaching and Learning
The Primacy of Dispositions
2012
EN
Accessible
The challenge this book addresses is to demonstrate how, in teaching content knowledge, the development of intellectual and moral dispositions as virtues is not merely a good idea, or peripheral to that content, but deeply embedded in the logic of searching for knowledge and truth.It offers a powerful example of how philosophy of education can be brought to bear on real problems of educational research and practice – pointing the reader to re-envision what it means to educate child...
$76.99 USD
Moral Status and Human Life
The Case for Children's Superiority
2010
EN
Are children of equal, lesser, or perhaps even greater moral importance than adults? This work of applied moral philosophy develops a comprehensive account of how adults as moral agents ascribe moral status to beings - ourselves and others - and on the basis of that account identifies multiple criteria for having moral status. It argues that proper application of those criteria should lead us to treat children as of greater moral importance than adults. This conclusion presents a basis for...
$38.59 USD











