101.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
E. J. Bond
Morality and Community
|
|
|
102.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Larry May
The Moral Interests of Social Groups
|
|
|
103.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Jan Narveson
A Contractarian Defense of the Liberal View on Abortion and of the Wrongness of Infanticide
|
|
|
104.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Holmes Rolston III
The Human Standing in Nature:
Storied Fitness in the Moral Overseer
|
|
|
105.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Gerald H. Paske
The Moral Priority of (Most) Human Beings
|
|
|
106.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
L. W. Sumner
Subjectivity and Moral Standing
|
|
|
107.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Eric Katz
Buffalo-Killing and the Valuation of Species
|
|
|
108.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
R. G. Frey
Autonomy and Conceptions of the Good Life
|
|
|
109.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Michael Wreen
The Possibility of Potentiality
|
|
|
110.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Christopher W. Morris
Value Subjectivism, Individualism, and Moral Standing
|
|
|
111.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
Robert B. Hallborg, Jr.
The Exploitation of Human Death
|
|
|
112.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
L. W. Sumner
A Response to Morris
|
|
|
113.
|
Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy:
Volume >
8
James Griffin
How Anthropocentric is Our Notion of Rights?
|
|
|