@book {578816, title = {The Trolley Problem Mysteries (The Berkeley Tanner Lectures)}, year = {2015}, pages = {272}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, author = {Kamm, FM} } @book {177926, title = {Being Realistic About Reasons}, year = {2014}, pages = {132}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {T. M. Scanlon offers a qualified defense of normative cognitivism--the view that there are irreducibly normative truths about reasons for action. He responds to three familiar objections: that such truths would have troubling metaphysical implications; that we would have no way of knowing what they are; and that the role of reasons in motivating and explaining action could not be explained if accepting a conclusion about reasons for action were a kind of belief. Scanlon answers the first of these objections within a general account of ontological commitment, applying to mathematics as well as normative judgments. He argues that the method of reflective equilibrium, properly understood, provides an adequate account of how we come to know both normative truths and mathematical truths, and that the idea of a rational agent explains the link between an agent{\textquoteright}s normative beliefs and his or her actions. Whether every statement about reasons for action has a determinate truth value is a question to be answered by an overall account of reasons for action, in normative terms. Since it seems unlikely that there is such an account, the defense of normative cognitivism offered here is qualified: statements about reasons for action can have determinate truth values, but it is not clear that all of them do. Along the way, Scanlon offers an interpretation of the distinction between normative and non-normative claims, a new account of the supervenience of the normative on the non-normative, an interpretation of the idea of the relative strength of reasons, and a defense of the method of reflective equilibrium. }, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=|library/m/aleph|013919311}, author = {Scanlon, T. M.} } @book {307696, title = {Causation: A User{\textquoteright}s Guide}, year = {2013}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=|library/m/aleph|013719893}, author = {Ned Hall and Paul, Laurie} } @book {RefWorks:29, title = {Context and the Attitudes}, volume = {. 1}, year = {2013}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 283]-285) and index.; HOLLIS no. 013655701}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Introduction : mental states and their ascription {\textendash} Direct reference and ascriptions of belief {\textendash} Quantification and Leibniz{\textquoteright}s law {\textendash} Attitude ascriptions, semantic theory, and pragmatic evidence {\textendash} How I say what you think {\textendash} Attitudes in context {\textendash} Defective contexts, accommodation, and normalization {\textendash} Propositional quantification {\textendash} Sense, necessity, and belief {\textendash} Semantic pretense {\textendash} Intensional transitives and empty terms {\textendash} Objects of relief {\textendash} Meaning and attitude ascriptions {\textendash} Kripke{\textquoteright}s puzzle.; Thirteen seminal essays by Mark Richard develop a nuanced account of semantics and propositional attitudes. The collection addresses a range of topics in philosophical semantics and philosophy of mind, and is accompanied by a new Introduction which discusses attitudes realized by dispositions and other non-linguistic cognitive structures.}, keywords = {Kontext, Proposition, Propositional attitudes, Semantics (Philosophy), Semantik}, isbn = {9780199557950 (hbk.); 0199557950 (hbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C013655701}, author = {Mark Richard} } @book {RefWorks:18, title = {Bioethical Prescriptions : To Create, End, Choose, and Improve Lives}, year = {2013}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 013774211}, pages = {xiv, 599}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Rescuing Ivan Ilych {\textendash} Conceptual issues related to ending life {\textendash} Problems with "assisted suicide {\textendash} Four-step arguments for physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia {\textendash} Some arguments by Velleman concerning suicide and assisted suicide {\textendash} Brody on active and passive euthanasia {\textendash} A note on dementia and advance directives {\textendash} Brain death and spontaneous breathing {\textendash} Using human embryos for biomedical research {\textendash} Ethical issues in using and not using human embryonic stem cells {\textendash} Ronald Dworkin{\textquoteright}s views on abortion {\textendash} Creation and abortion short {\textendash} McMahan on the ethics of killing at the margins of life {\textendash} Some conceptual and ethical issues in Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy {\textendash} Genes, justice, and obligations to future people {\textendash} Moral status, personal Identity, and substitutability {\textendash} What is and is not wrong with enhancement? {\textendash} Health and equity {\textendash} Health and equality of opportunity {\textendash} Is it morally permissible to discontinue nontutile use of a scarce resource? {\textendash} Aggregation, allocating scarce resources, and discrimination against the disabled {\textendash} Rationing and the disabled {\textendash} Learning from bioethics {\textendash} The philosopher as insider and outsider {\textendash} Theory and analogy in law and philosophy {\textendash} Types of relations between theory and practice {\textendash} Understanding, justifying, and finding oneself.}, keywords = {Bioethical Issues, Bioethical Issues {\textendash} Collected Works, Bioethics, Collected Works, Ethics, Genetic Enhancement {\textendash} ethics, Genetic Enhancement {\textendash} ethics {\textendash} Collected Works, Health Care Rationing {\textendash} ethics, Health Care Rationing {\textendash} ethics {\textendash} Collected Works, Human experimentation in medicine {\textendash} Moral and ethical aspects, Medical ethics, Medicine {\textendash} Philosophy, Research, Research {\textendash} Collected Works, Terminal Care {\textendash} ethics, Terminal Care {\textendash} ethics {\textendash} Collected Works}, isbn = {9780199971985 (hardback : alk. paper); 9780199971992 (updf)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=|library/m/aleph|013774211}, author = {Kamm, FM} } @book {RefWorks:21, title = {The Moral Target : Aiming at Right Conduct in War and Other Conflicts}, year = {2012}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 013401888}, pages = {xiv, 260 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Making war and its continuation unjust {\textendash} Conduct in war : justifications for killing noncombatants in war {\textendash} Conduct in war : failures of just war theory {\textendash} Conduct in war : the morality of killing in war {\textendash} Collaboration and with the enemy : harming some to save others from the Nazis {\textendash} Post conflict : moral improvisation and new obligations {\textendash} Post conflict : jus post bello, proportionality, and rehabilitation {\textendash} Terrorism and several moral distinctions {\textendash} Self defense, resistance, and suicide : the Taliban women {\textendash} Nuclear deterrence and noncombatants.}, keywords = {Just war doctrine, Military ethics, War {\textendash} Moral and ethical aspects}, isbn = {9780199897520 (alk. paper); 0199897522 (alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C013401888}, author = {Kamm, FM.} } @book {RefWorks:20, title = {Ethics for Enemies : Terror, Torture, and War}, year = {2011}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 169-171) and index..; HOLLIS no. 012849540}, pages = {178 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford }, keywords = {Terrorism {\textendash} Moral and ethical aspects, Torture {\textendash} Moral and ethical aspects, War {\textendash} Moral and ethical aspects}, isbn = {0199608784; 9780199608782}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C012849540}, author = {Kamm, FM.} } @book {RefWorks:5, title = {All Things Shining : Reading the Western Classics to find Meaning in a Secular Age}, year = {2011}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 227-243) and index.; HOLLIS no. 012680982}, pages = {xi, 254 p.}, publisher = {Free Press}, organization = {Free Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {{\textquotedblleft}What constitutes human excellence?{\textquotedblright} and {\textquotedblleft}What is the best way to live a life?{\textquotedblright} These are questions that human beings have been asking since the beginning of time. In their critically acclaimed book, All Things Shining, Hubert Dreyfus and Sean Dorrance Kelly argue that our search for meaning was once fulfilled by our responsiveness to forces greater than ourselves, whether one God or many. These forces drew us in and imbued the ordinary moments of life with wonder and gratitude. Dreyfus and Kelly argue in this thought-provoking work that as we began to rely on the power of our own independent will we lost our skill for encountering the sacred. Through their original and transformative discussion of some of the greatest works of Western literature, from Homer{\textquoteright}s Odyssey to Melville{\textquoteright}s Moby Dick, Dreyfus and Kelly reveal how we have lost our passionate engagement with the things that gave our lives purpose, and show how, by reading our culture{\textquoteright}s classics anew, we can once again be drawn into intense involvement with the wonder and beauty of the world. }, keywords = {Meaning (Philosophy), Religion, Religions}, isbn = {9781416596158 (alk. paper); 1416596151 (alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C012680982}, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus and Sean Kelly} } @inbook {RefWorks:13, title = {Representing the Real: a Merleau-Pontyan Account of Art and Experience from the Renaissance to New Media}, booktitle = {Art and Phenomenology}, year = {2011}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 012851236}, publisher = {Routledge}, organization = {Routledge}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Philosophy of art is traditionally concerned with the definition, appreciation and value of art. Through a close examination of art from recent centuries, Art and Phenomenology is one of the first books to explore visual art as a mode of experiencing the word itself, showing how, in the words of Merleau-Ponty, "Painting does not imitate the world, but is a world of its own". Including an extensive selection of full colour reproductions, Art and Phenomenology is essential reading for anyone interested in Phenomenology, aesthetics, and visual culture.}, keywords = {Aesthetics, Art {\textendash} Philosophy, Phenomenology and art}, isbn = {9780415774499 (hardback : alk. paper); 0415774497 (hardback : alk. paper); 9780415774505 (pbk. : alk. paper); 0415774500 (pbk. :}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C012851236}, author = {Sean Kelly}, editor = {Joseph D. Parry} } @book {RefWorks:46, title = {The Contents of Visual Experience}, year = {2010}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 012689554}, pages = {x, 222 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, keywords = {Experience, Philosophy of mind, vision}, isbn = {9780195305296 (alk. paper); 0195305299 (alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C012689554}, author = {Susanna Siegel} } @book {RefWorks:41, title = {The Idea of Justice}, year = {2009}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 011967208}, pages = {xxviii, 467 p.}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass.}, abstract = {Introduction: An approach to justice {\textendash} The demands of justice. {\textendash} Reason and objectivity {\textendash} Rawls and beyond {\textendash} Institutions and persons {\textendash} Voice and social choice {\textendash} Impartiality and objectivity {\textendash} Closed and open impartiality {\textendash} Forms of reasoning. {\textendash} Position, relevance and illusion {\textendash} Rationality and other people {\textendash} Plurality of impartial reasons {\textendash} Realizations, consequences and agency {\textendash} The materials of justice. {\textendash} Lives, freedoms and capabilities {\textendash} Capabilities and resources {\textendash} Happiness, well-being and capabilities {\textendash} Equality and liberty {\textendash} Public reasoning and democracy. {\textendash} Democracy as public reason {\textendash} The practice of democracy {\textendash} Human rights and global imperatives {\textendash} Justice and the world.; Presents an analysis of what justice is, the transcendental theory of justice and its drawbacks, and a persuasive argument for a comparative perspective on justice that can guide us in the choice between alternatives.}, keywords = {1921-2002. Theory of justice, Ethics, Gerechtigkeit, John, Justice, Rawls, Social contract, Soziale Gerechtigkeit, Theorie}, isbn = {9780674036130 (hardcover : alk. paper); 0674036131}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C011967208}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:25, title = {Self-constitution : Agency, Identity, and Integrity}, year = {2009}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 215]-218) and index.; HOLLIS no. 011936598}, pages = {xiv, 230 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford }, abstract = {Agency and identity {\textendash} Necessitation {\textendash} Acts and actions {\textendash} Aristotle and Kant {\textendash} Agency and practical identity {\textendash} The metaphysics of normativity {\textendash} Constitutive standards {\textendash} The constitution of life {\textendash} In defense of teleology {\textendash} The paradox of self-constitution {\textendash} Formal and substantive principles of reason {\textendash} Formal versus substantive {\textendash} Testing versus weighing {\textendash} Maximizing and prudence {\textendash} Practical reason and the unity of the will {\textendash} The empiricist account of normativity {\textendash} The rationalist account of normativity {\textendash} Kant on the hypothetical imperative {\textendash} Against particularistic willing {\textendash} Deciding and predicting {\textendash} Autonomy and efficacy {\textendash} The function of action {\textendash} The possibility of agency {\textendash} Non-rational action {\textendash} Action {\textendash} Attribution {\textendash} The psychology of action {\textendash} Expulsion from the garden : the transition to humanity {\textendash} Instinct, emotion, intelligence, and reason {\textendash} The parts of the soul {\textendash} Inside or outside {\textendash} Pull yourself together {\textendash} The constitutional model {\textendash} Models of the soul {\textendash} The city and the soul {\textendash} Platonic virtues {\textendash} Justice : substantive, procedural, and platonic {\textendash} Kant and the constitutional model {\textendash} Defective action {\textendash} The problem of bad action {\textendash} Being governed by the wrong law {\textendash} Or five bad constitutions {\textendash} Conceptions of evil {\textendash} Degrees of action {\textendash} Integrity and interaction {\textendash} Deciding to be bad {\textendash} The ordinary cases {\textendash} Dealing with the disunified {\textendash} Kant{\textquoteright}s theory of interaction {\textendash} My reasons {\textendash} Deciding to treat someone as an end in himself {\textendash} Interacting with yourself {\textendash} How to be a person {\textendash} What{\textquoteright}s left of me?}, keywords = {Act (Philosophy), Agent (Philosophy), Ethics, Practical reason}, isbn = {9780199552801 (pbk. : alk. paper); 0199552800 (pbk. : alk. paper); 9780199552795 (hardback : alk. paper); 0199552797 (hardback :}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C011936598}, author = {Christine M. Korsgaard} } @book {RefWorks:28, title = {When Truth Gives Out}, year = {2008}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 177]-179) and index.; HOLLIS no. 011540981}, pages = {184 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford }, abstract = {Epithets and attitudes {\textendash} When truth gives out {\textendash} What the emotivists should have said {\textendash} What{\textquoteright}s the matter with relativism? {\textendash} Matters of taste {\textendash} Appendix 1 : what can be said? {\textendash} Appendix 2 : relativism and contextualism about knowledge.}, keywords = {Truth}, isbn = {9780199239955 (alk. paper); 0199239959 (alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=|library/m/aleph|011540981}, author = {Mark Richard} } @book {RefWorks:32, title = {Moral Dimensions : Permissibility, Meaning, Blame}, year = {2008}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 239]-242) and index.; HOLLIS no. 011543050}, pages = {xii, 247 p.}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass.}, abstract = {The illusory appeal of double effect {\textendash} The significance of intent {\textendash} Means and ends {\textendash} Blame.; "In a clear and elegant style, T. M. Scanlon reframes current philosophical debates as he explores the moral permissibility of an action. Permissibility may seem to depend on the agent{\textquoteright}s reasons for performing an action. There seems to be an important moral difference, for example, between tactical bombing and a campaign by terrorists - even if the same number of noncombatants are killed - and this difference may seem to lie in the agents{\textquoteright} respective aims. Scanlon argues, however, that the apparent dependence of permissibility on the agent{\textquoteright}s reasons in such cases is merely a failure to distinguish between two kinds of moral assessment: assessment of the permissibility of an action and assessment of the way an agent decided what to do." "The meaning of an action depends on the agent{\textquoteright}s reasons for performing it, in a way that its permissibility does not. Blame, he argues, is a response to the meaning of an action rather than to its permissibility. This analysis leads to a novel account of the conditions of moral responsibility and to important conclusions about the ethics of blame."{\textendash}BOOK JACKET.}, keywords = {Absicht, Auswirkung, Beurteilung, Blame, Ends and means, Ethik, Ethik {\textendash} Rechtfertigung, Handlung, Intention, Konsequentialismus, Konsequenz, Moral, Rechtfertigung {\textendash} Ethik, Schuld, Schuld (Psychologie), Verantwortung}, isbn = {9780674031784 (alk. paper); 0674031784 (alk. paper); 9780674057456 (pbk.); 0674057457 (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C011543050}, author = {Thomas Scanlon} } @book {RefWorks:24, title = {The Constitution of Agency : Essays on Practical Reason and Moral Psychology}, year = {2008}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 327]-334) and index.; HOLLIS no. 011814150}, pages = {x, 345 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford }, keywords = {Ethics, Practical reason, Psychology and philosophy}, isbn = {9780199552733 (hbk.); 0199552738 (hbk.); 0199552746 (pbk.); 9780199552740 (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=|library/m/aleph|011814150}, author = {Christine M. Korsgaard} } @book {RefWorks:19, title = {Intricate Ethics : Rights, Responsibilities, and Permissible Harm}, year = {2007}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 491-497) and index.; HOLLIS no. 010169436}, pages = {x, 509 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford }, abstract = {Nonconsequentialism {\textendash} Aggregation and two moral methods {\textendash} Intention, harm, and the possibility of a unified theory {\textendash} The doctrines of double and triple effect and why a rational agent need not intend the means to his end {\textendash} Toward the essence of nonconsequentialist constraints on harming : modality, productive purity, and the greater good working itself out {\textendash} Harming people in Peter Unger{\textquoteright}s Living high and letting die {\textendash} Moral status {\textendash} Rights beyond interests {\textendash} Conflicts of rights : a typology {\textendash} Responsibility and collaboration {\textendash} Does distance matter morally to the duty to rescue? {\textendash} The new problem of distance in morality {\textendash} Peter Singer{\textquoteright}s ethical theory {\textendash} Moral intuitions, cognitive psychology, and the harming/not-aiding distinction {\textendash} Harms, losses, and evils in Gert{\textquoteright}s moral theory {\textendash} Owing, justifying, and rejecting.}, keywords = {Consequentialism (Ethics), Ethics, Responsibility}, isbn = {0195189698 (alk. paper); 9780195189698 (alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C010169436}, author = {Kamm, FM.} } @book {RefWorks:39, title = {Identity and Violence : The Illusion of Destiny}, year = {2006}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 187-197) and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 009880555}, pages = {xx, 215 p.}, publisher = {W.W. Norton }, organization = {W.W. Norton }, address = {New York}, abstract = {The violence of illusion {\textendash} Making sense of identity {\textendash} Civilizational confinement {\textendash} Religious affiliations and Muslim history {\textendash} West and anti-west {\textendash} Culture and captivity {\textendash} Globalization and voice {\textendash} Multiculturalism and freedom {\textendash} Freedom to think.}, keywords = {Group identity, Identity (Philosophical concept), Violence}, isbn = {0393060071 (hardcover); 9780393060072}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C009880555}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:40, title = {The Argumentative Indian : Writings on Indian History, Culture, and Identity}, year = {2006}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 357-391) and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 011566895}, pages = {xx, 409 p.}, publisher = {Picador}, organization = {Picador}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The argumentative Indian {\textendash} Inequality, instability, and voice {\textendash} India: large and small {\textendash} The diaspora and the world {\textendash} Tagore and his India {\textendash} Our culture{\textendash}their culture {\textendash} Indian traditions and the Western imagination {\textendash} China and India {\textendash} Tryst with destiny {\textendash} Class in India {\textendash} Women and men {\textendash} India and the bomb {\textendash} The reach of reason {\textendash} Secularism and its discontents {\textendash} India through its calendars {\textendash} The Indian identity.; Voice and heterodoxy {\textendash} Culture and communication {\textendash} Politics and protest {\textendash} Reason and identity.}, keywords = {India {\textendash} Civilization}, isbn = {9780312426026; 031242602X (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C011566895}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:44, title = {Hip Hop and Philosophy : Rhyme 2 Reason}, volume = {. 16}, year = {2005}, note = {Includes bibliographical references, discography (p. 213-216), and index.; HOLLIS no. 009841287}, pages = {xviii, 233 p.}, publisher = {Open Court}, organization = {Open Court}, address = {Chicago}, abstract = {DISK 1. DA MYSTERIES: GOD, LOVE, AND KNOWLEDGE {\textendash} Yo! It ain{\textquoteright}t no mystery: who is God? / Derrick Darby {\textendash} Ain{\textquoteright}t (just) {\textquoteright}bout da booty: funky reflections on love / Tommie Shelby {\textendash} "You perceive with your mind": knowledge and perception / Mitchell S. Green {\textendash} DISK 2. WHAT{\textquoteright}S BEEF? RUMINATIONS ON VIOLENCE {\textendash} "Y{\textquoteright}all niggaz better recognize": Hip Hop{\textquoteright}s dialectical struggle for recognition / John P. Pittman {\textendash} Rap aesthetics: violence and the art of keeping it real / Richard Shusterman {\textendash} "F**k tha police state]": rap, warfare, and the leviathan / Joy James {\textendash} DISK 3. THAT{\textquoteright}S HOW I{\textquoteright}M LIVIN{\textquoteright}: AUTHENTICITY, BLACKNESS, AND SEXUALITY {\textendash} Does Hip Hop belong to me? The philosophy of race and culture / Paul C. Taylor {\textendash} Queen bees and big pimps: sex and sexuality in Hip Hop / Kathryn T. Gines {\textendash} Grown folks{\textquoteright} business: the problem of maturity in Hip Hop / Lewis Gordon {\textendash} DISK 4. WORD UP! LANGUAGE, MEANING, AND ETHICS {\textendash} Knowshatumsayin{\textquoteright}? How Hip-Hop lyrics mean / Stephen Lester Thompson {\textendash} Girl got 99 problems: is Hip Hop one? / Sarah McGrath, Lidet Tilahun {\textendash} "For all my niggaz and bitches": ethics and eptithets / J. Angelo Corlett {\textendash} DISK 5. FIGHT THE POWER: POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY {\textquoteright}N THE HOOD {\textendash} Microphone commandos: rap music and political philosophy / Bill E. Lawson {\textendash} Halfway revolution: from that gangsta Hobbes to radical liberals / Lionel K. McPherson {\textendash} Criminal-justice minded: retribution, punishment, and authority / Erin I. Kelly {\textendash} Gettin{\textquoteright} dis{\textquoteright}d and gettin{\textquoteright} paid: rectifying injustice / Rodney C. Roberts {\textendash} After ... word! The philosophy of the Hip-Hop battle / Marcyliena Morgan.}, keywords = {Hip-hop, Music and philosophy, Rap (Music) {\textendash} Social aspects}, isbn = {0812695895 (trade pbk. : alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C009841287}, author = {Derrick Darby and Tommie Shelby} } @book {RefWorks:43, title = {We Who Are Dark : The Philosophical Foundations of Black Solidarity}, year = {2005}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 259]-302) and index.; HOLLIS no. 009738561}, pages = {xiv, 320 p.}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass.}, abstract = {Two conceptions of Black nationalism {\textendash} Class, poverty, and shame {\textendash} Black power nationalism {\textendash} Black solidarity after Black power {\textendash} Race, culture, and politics {\textendash} Social identity and group solidarity.}, keywords = {African Americans {\textendash} Politics and government, African Americans {\textendash} Race identity, African Americans {\textendash} Social conditions {\textendash} 1975-, Black nationalism {\textendash} United States, Black power {\textendash} United States, Ethnicity {\textendash} Political aspects {\textendash} United States, Racism {\textendash} Political aspects {\textendash} United States, United States {\textendash} Race relations {\textendash} Political aspects}, isbn = {0674019369 (alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C009738561}, author = {Tommie Shelby} } @inbook {RefWorks:4, title = {Temporal Awareness}, booktitle = {Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind}, year = {2005}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 009804464}, publisher = {Clarendon Press }, organization = {Clarendon Press }, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Philosophical work on the mind flowed in two streams through the 20th century: phenomenology and analytic philosophy. This volume aims to bring them together again, by demonstrating how work in phenomenology may lead to significant progress on problems central to current analytic research, and how analytical philosophy of mind may shed light on phenomenological concerns. Leading figures from both traditions contribute specially written essays on such central topics as consciousness, intentionality, perception, action, self-knowledge, temporal awareness, and mental content. Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind demonstrates that these different approaches to the mind should not stand in opposition to each other, but can be mutually illuminating.}, keywords = {Phenomenology, Philosophy of mind}, isbn = {019927245X (pbk. : alk. paper); 0199272441 (hbk. :alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C009804464}, author = {Sean Kelly}, editor = {David Woodruff Smith and Amie L. Thomasson} } @book {RefWorks:17, title = {Causation and Counterfactuals}, year = {2004}, note = {"A Bradford book."; Includes bibliographical references (p. 459]-467) and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 009422088}, pages = {viii, 481 p.}, publisher = {MIT Press}, organization = {MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass.}, keywords = {Causality, Causation, Counterfactuals (Logic)}, isbn = {0262033178 (alk. paper); 0262532565 (pb. : alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C009422088}, editor = {John David Collins and Ned Hall and L. A. Paul} } @book {RefWorks:8, title = {Collected Works}, year = {2003}, note = {"Prepared under the auspices of the Association for Symbolic Logic."; German text, parallel English translation.; Vol. 3 has imprint: New York : Oxford University Press.; Includes bibliographical references and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 000599544}, pages = {5 v.}, publisher = {Clarendon Press }, organization = {Clarendon Press }, address = {Oxford }, abstract = {v. 1. Publications 1929-1936 {\textendash} v. 2. Publications 1938-1974 {\textendash} v. 3. Unpublished essays and lectures {\textendash} v. 4. Correspondence A-G {\textendash} v. 5. Correspondence H-Z.}, keywords = {Logic, Symbolic and mathematical}, isbn = {0195039645 (v. 1)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C000599544}, author = {Kurt G{\"o}del}, editor = {Solomon Feferman and Warren Goldfarb} } @book {RefWorks:27, title = {Meaning}, volume = {5}, year = {2003}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 009084687}, pages = {x, 341 p.}, publisher = {Blackwell Pub}, organization = {Blackwell Pub}, address = {Malden, MA}, keywords = {Language and languages {\textendash} Philosophy, Meaning (Philosophy)}, isbn = {0631222227 (alk. paper); 0631222235 (pbk. : alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C009084687}, editor = {Mark Richard} } @book {RefWorks:31, title = {The Difficulty of Tolerance : Essays in Political Philosophy}, year = {2003}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 009187952}, pages = {ix, 273 p.}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge }, abstract = {A theory of freedom of expression {\textendash} Rights, goals, and fairness {\textendash} Due process {\textendash} Preference and urgency {\textendash} Freedom of expression and categories of expression {\textendash} Human rights as a neutral concern {\textendash} Contractualism and utilitarianism {\textendash} Content regulation reconsidered {\textendash} Value, desire, and quality of life {\textendash} The difficulty of tolerance {\textendash} The diversity of objections to inequality {\textendash} Punishment and the rule of law {\textendash} Promises and contracts.}, keywords = {Civil rights, Human rights, Political science {\textendash} Philosophy, Quality of Life, Social institutions}, isbn = {0521826616; 0521533988 (PBK.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C009187952}, author = {Thomas Scanlon} } @book {RefWorks:10, title = {Deductive Logic}, year = {2003}, note = {Includes index.; HOLLIS no. 006945662}, pages = {xv, 292 p.}, publisher = {Hackett Pub}, organization = {Hackett Pub}, address = {Indianapolis, IN}, keywords = {Logic}, isbn = {0872206602 (cloth)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C006945662}, author = {Warren Goldfarb} } @book {RefWorks:38, title = {Rationality and Freedom}, year = {2002}, note = {Includes bibliographical references and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 008932671}, pages = {ix, 736 p.}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass.}, keywords = {Decision making, Liberty, Rational choice theory, Social choice}, isbn = {0674009479 (alk. paper); 0674013514 (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C008932671}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:37, title = {Reason Before Identity}, year = {1999}, note = {"Delivered before the University of Oxford on 17 November 1998."; Includes bibliographical references.; HOLLIS no. 008453383}, pages = {31 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford }, keywords = {Group identity {\textendash} Congresses, Identity (Psychology) {\textendash} Social aspects {\textendash} Congresses}, isbn = {0199513899 (acid-free paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C008453383}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:35, title = {Commodities and Capabilities}, year = {1999}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 71]-84) and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 008155202}, pages = {89 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {New Delhi}, keywords = {Welfare economics}, isbn = {0195650387}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C008155202}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:30, title = {What We Owe to Each Other}, year = {1998}, note = {Book based on material presented at meetings and colloquiums; several chapters have been previously published in various journals.; Includes bibliographical references (p. 409]-416) and index.; HOLLIS no. 007832955}, pages = {ix, 420 p.}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass.}, keywords = {Judgment (Ethics), Right and wrong}, isbn = {0674950895 (alk. paper); 067400423X (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C007832955}, author = {Thomas Scanlon} } @book {RefWorks:33, title = {On Economic Inequality}, year = {1997}, note = {Originally published: 1973. (Radcliffe lectures ; 1972).; Includes bibliographical references (p. 221]-251) and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 007489979}, pages = {xii, 260 p.}, publisher = {Clarendon Press}, organization = {Clarendon Press}, address = {Oxford }, keywords = {Equality, Welfare economics}, isbn = {019829297X; 0198281935 (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C007489979}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:34, title = {Choice, Welfare, and Measurement}, year = {1997}, note = {Originally published: Oxford : Blackwell, 1982.; Includes bibliographical references and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 007530158}, pages = {460 p.}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, Mass}, keywords = {Social choice, Utility theory, Welfare economics}, isbn = {0674127781 (pbk. : alk. paper)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C007530158}, author = {Sen, Amartya} } @book {RefWorks:23, title = {The Sources of Normativity}, year = {1996}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 259-265) and index.; HOLLIS no. 006603695}, pages = {xv, 273 p.}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge }, keywords = {Normativity (Ethics)}, isbn = {0521550599 (hc); 052155960X (pb)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C006603695}, author = {Christine M. Korsgaard} } @book {RefWorks:22, title = {Creating the Kingdom of Ends}, year = {1996}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p.399-405) and indexes.; HOLLIS no. 005862029}, pages = {xviii, 442 p.}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge }, keywords = {1724-1804 {\textendash} Ethics, Immanuel, Kant}, isbn = {0521496446; 0521499623 (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C005862029}, author = {Christine M. Korsgaard} } @book {RefWorks:42, title = {Inequality Reexamined}, year = {1995}, note = {Includes biographical references and index.; HOLLIS no. 012030408}, pages = {222 p.}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, keywords = {Equality, Liberty, Welfare economics}, isbn = {9780198289289}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=|library/m/aleph|012030408}, author = {Amartya Sen 1933-} } @book {RefWorks:26, title = {Propositional Attitudes : An Essay on Thoughts and How We Ascribe Them}, year = {1990}, note = {Includes bibliographical references (p. 267-271) and index.; HOLLIS no. 001829058}, pages = {ix, 275 p.}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge }, keywords = {Attitude (Psychology), Cognition, Logic, Proposition (Logic), Semantics}, isbn = {0521381266; 0521388198 (pbk.)}, url = {http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=\%7Clibrary/m/aleph\%7C001829058}, author = {Mark Richard} }