Cover of The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics
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1. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
John Kelsay, Sumner B. Twiss Preface
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presidential address
2. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Lisa Sowle Cahill Community Versus Universals: A Misplaced Debate in Christian Ethics
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panel on the work of stanley harakas
3. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Vigen Guroian Fr. Stanley Harakas: Introductory Comments
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4. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Timothy F. Sedgwick A Short Response to Stanley Harakas
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5. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
James Gustafson Cosmic Theocentrism: Remarks On Stanley Harakas's "Toward Transfigured Life"
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6. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
M. Therese Lysaught The Work of Fr. Stanley Harakas: A Panel Discussion
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7. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Stanley S. Harakas Response
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8. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
A Select Bibliography of Works by Stanley Samuel Harakas
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conversations with related societies
9. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Werner Wolbert Christian Ethics in Europe: A Perspective from the "Societas Ethica"
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10. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
William Schweiker Christian Ethics in Europe: A Response to Werner Wolbert
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historical—constructive studies
11. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Maria Antonaccio Contemporary Forms of Askesis and the Return of Spiritual Exercises
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This paper examines recent philosophical retrievals of the ancient idea of askesis and argues that they face a dilemma. On the one hand, these retrievals embrace certain assumptions often associated with "antitheory" and moral particularism in ethics; yet ancient forms of askesis were based on assumptions that most antitheorists would reject. After presenting a threefold critical typology of approaches to askesis—existential (Hadot), aesthetic (Foucault), and therapeutic (Nussbaum)—the paper demonstrates the limitations of each model and presents an alternative reflexive model, drawn in part from the work of Charles Taylor and Iris Murdoch, as a more adequate approach.
12. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
John Crossley Schleiermacher's Christian Ethics in Relation to His Philosophical Ethics
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The paper argues that while Schleiermacher intends to base Christian ethics on the Christian principle of a supra-rational knowledge of God's will communicated solely through Christ, and not available to human reason, Schleiermacher nevertheless borrows for his Christian ethics from his philosophical ethics. He is able to do this because his philosophical ethics, as distinct from Kant's, incorporates insights from religious feeling. Schleiermacher's Christian ethics, therefore, is more a theory of Christian, reformative action in the church and the state than a full-blown religious ethics.
social ethics
13. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Peter D. Browning Church Talk in Christian Ethics: Lessons from the Writing of Tex Sample and Robert Wuthnow
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Christian ethicists writing about the church need to take the contributions of sociology of religion more clearly into account when they develop their theories. Using the work of Tex Sample and Robert Wuthnow, the author criticizes the image of the church as "colony" adopted by Stanley Hauerwas and William Willimon, as well as the model of church as "discipleship of equals" supported by feminist biblical scholar Elisabeth Schüssler-Fiorenza. Neither model of the church attends adequately to various sociological realities in the church, in particular, to the influences of class and social location on church communities and their members.
14. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan Ebonics as an Ethically Sound Discourse: A Solution, Not a Problem
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During 1996-1997, between the OJ Simpson criminal and civil trials, the media needed a sensational topic. They discovered "Ebonics." The Oakland, California School Board's resolution declaring "Ebonics" a language triggered controversy and condemnation. This essay explores ethical implications for the pedagogical use of Ebonics from a Womanist perspective, as a vehicle of empowerment. After defining Womanist thought, I explore: (1) the history of Ebonics and the Oakland School Board's concerns; (2) the impact of Ebonics on student and teacher authority; (3) the hermeneutics and ethical issues surrounding Ebonics; and (4) how using Ebonics empowers or marginalizes teacher and student.
15. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
William O'Neill Babel's Children: Reconstructing the Common Good
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In this essay, I consider the rival liberal and communitarian accounts of justice emerging in complex, pluralist societies. I argue that we err in posing the question of human rights as a Hobson's choice between a formal, universal metanarrative, as envisioned in philosophical liberalism, or as a merely local, ethnocentric narrative of the western bourgeoisie, as in the communitarian critique. For human rights are best viewed rhetorically, as establishing the possibility of rationally persuasive argument across our varied narrative traditions. The essay concludes by attending to the role of religious belief in the public reason of a postmodern society.
16. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Cristina L. H. Traina Passionate Mothering: Toward an Ethic of Appropriate Mother-Child Intimacy
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Women's informal accounts of their experience, news reports, and psychological and endocrinological studies concur that maternal-infant relations are inevitably erotic, if not explicitly sexually charged. In a culture that both affirms pursuit of "natural" pleasure and condemns overt eroticism in any relationship between unequals, maternal erotic experience is problematic. This essay gathers insights from the literatures of psychoanalysis, naturalism, maternal practice, and victim advocacy, as well as the Christian theological ethics of Lisa Sowle Cahill, Christine E. Gudorf, and Bonnie J. Miller-McLemore, to construct a tentative descriptive and prescriptive account of maternal eroticism.
just war tradition
17. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Martin L. Cook Applied Just War Theory: Moral Implications of New Weapons for Air War
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More than any other dimension of modern war, strategic use of air power has systematically violated the moral principle of non-combatant immunity to direct military attack that lies at the heart of the idea of just war. This paper will argue that new air weapons and tactics, such as those used in the Gulf War, mark a real change in that moral reality of war. Further, the paper explores directions in which weapons procurement, tactics, and military doctrine should continue to evolve if the military forces of the United States are to continue to improve their capabilities to conduct stragetic bombing campaigns in future wars within the limits of just war.
18. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Tobias L. Winright Two Rival Versions of Just War Theory and the Presumption Against Harm in Policing
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In recent years, there has been a debate, centrally between James Turner Johnson and James F. Childress, on how to understand the just war tradition. The international arena has historically served as the context for demonstrating the normative and political utility of the just war tradition. Contemporary experience shows, however, that violence is not only a distant issue, but it is also a local, domestic problem. Investigation into contemporary police practice, a lacuna in Christian ethics, with regard to the justifiable use of force can help clarify which understanding of the just war tradition is preferable.
applied ethics
19. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
George D. Randels, Jr. Business and "Family Values"
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Feminist theologians and ethicists reject the normative nature of traditional gender roles as unjust, and as part of a sinful social order. In its place, they advocate mutuality and alternative anthropologies. Although I find much of this work compelling, I question its rejection of capitalism as endemic of the old sexual-political order. Capitalism is not monolithic, nor is it necessarily hostile to women. I advocate a stakeholder model of capitalism, which can more readily address the feminist critique. Such a model would reject both the rigid traditional family roles that denigrate women, and the radical individualism that undermines family.
20. The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics: Volume > 18
Timothy M. Renick A Cabbit in Sheep's Clothing: Exploring the Sources of Our Moral Disquiet About Cloning
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Emerging from the first successful cloning of a mammal, a sheep named "Dolly," is a critical but under-asked question: "Why do so many of us find this feat (and its potential application to human subjects) to be deeply disturbing?" This paper suggests that the answer rests not primarily in the theological and philosophical arguments most often heard against cloning but in the threat the act poses to our foundational "cosmological categories." Building upon theories introduced by Mary Douglas and Jeffrey Stout, the essay argues that Dolly becomes a "cabbit" in sheep's clothing—an outwardly innocuous entity which, like Stout's cat/rabbit, offends at a deep and visceral level. Like the cabbit, the cloned sheep and especially the cloned human are disturbing not because of the way they are produced nor by the physical threat they pose but because they challenge the very way we understand and organize our world.