A Kind of Pantheism: Escape from Cosmic Pessimism and the Quest for a Biocentric Ethic explores how such nineteenth-century transcendentalists as Henry David Thoreau and John Muir advanced a biocentric ethic that recognized the intrinsic worth of both plants and animals.
First published in 1963, Varieties of Goodness presents analysis of the concept of value and its relations with the neighbouring concepts of fact and norm.
In this new kind of introduction to ethical theory, Daniel Munoz and Sarah Stroud present 50 of the field's most exciting puzzles, paradoxes, and thought experiments.
Reversing the usual order of interpretation, Donald Wilson reinterprets Kant's moral theory through his later practical works offering a new inner freedom account informing obscure aspects of Kant's formal moral philosophy and the practical focus of ideals of proper respect.