141.
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Kathryn Tanner
Public Theology and the Character of Public Debate
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142.
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Robert W. Tuttle
Paul Ramsey and the Common Law Tradition
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143.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Edward Collins Vacek
Love For God—Is It Obligatory?
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144.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Max L. Stackhouse
The Moral Meanings of Covenant
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145.
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Cumulative Index
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146.
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Dirk J. Smit
Covenant and Ethics?:
Comments from a South African Perspective
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147.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Roy H. May, Jr.
Reconciliation: A Political Requirement for Latin America
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148.
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Maria Antonaccio
Imagining the Good:
Iris Murdoch's Godless Theology
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149.
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Douglas F. Ottati, Douglas J. Schuurman
Covenantal Ethics: Introduction
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150.
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Charles H. Reynolds
Text, Argument and Society:
Remembering and Anticipating Our Collegial Identity
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151.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Simeon O. Ilesanmi
Civil-Political Rights or Social Economic Rights for Africa?:
A Comparative Ethical Critique of a False Dichotomy
abstract |
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rights & permissions
A key aspect of the human rights debate in Africa has centered on the kinds of rights that are appropriate for the continent. This essay examines the controversy between the advocates of civil-political rights and those of socio-economic rights, and the tendency to separate these two sets of values on the grounds of their supposed incompatibility and of Africa's unique realities. The essay contends that this conclusion is dangerous as it could be used as an excuse to ignore any human rights in Africa, a fear that is justified by the recent history of the continent. Drawing upon religious and ethical perspectives, it proposes the concept of interdependence to forge a normative unity between the two contested sets of rights and argues that this integral vision of rights is needed to ensure maximal realization of human and communal flourishings in Africa.
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152.
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Ann Elizabeth Mayer
Women's Human Rights and the Islamic Tradition
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153.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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John Kelsay, Sumner B. Twiss
Preface
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154.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Vigen Guroian
Human Rights and Christian Ethics:
An Orthodox Critique
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155.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Martin L. Cook
Reflections on James Gustafson's Theological-Ethical Method
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156.
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The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Daniel Rush Finn
Valuing the Future:
On the Ethics and Economics of Discounting Future Events in Public Policy
abstract |
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Public policy analysis employs a discounting to translate future costs or benefits of alternative policies into a "present value" by reducing them, based on a discount rate and the number of years in the future when these outcomes will occur. In recent years, many professional ethicists, from both philosophical and religious perspectives, have criticized discounting as morally inadequate, particularly when assessing potential long-term environmental damage, such as that arising from global warming. This essay reviews the ethical objections to discounting and concludes that discounting is a necessary dimension of the moral assessment made in public policy analysis, ultimately helpful provided that policy makers also respect two constraints to ensure sustainability and equity.
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157.
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Contributors
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158.
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Darryl L. Birkenfeld
Deciphering Moral Landscapes in Agricultural Biotechnology
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In the complex field of agricultural biotechnology, is there an approach that Christian ethicists can use to evaluate competing claims, multiple goods, and human rights issues in this important arena where humans and natures are intertwined? This paper is an attempt to apply Gibson Winter's three root metaphors (organic, mechanistic and artistic) as an ethical analysis that describes key socio-historical patterns in Western society and deciphers moral landscapes that undergird different forms of agricultural biotechnology. The paper also explores five key principles of the emerging "artistic" root metaphor that could guide more appropriate application and use of agricultural biotechnology.
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159.
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John R. Bowlin
Augustine on Justifying Coercion
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Augustine encouraged Christian bishops and magistrates to coerce and constrain religious dissenters, he participated in these activities almost from the start of his career as presbyter under Valerius, and he offered justifications for what he did. Robert Markus and John Milbank consider Augustine's justifications inconsistent with the aspect of his social thought each admires most. Their conclusions are unwarranted and unnecessary. Augustine's justifications are neither inconsistent with the rest of his social thought, nor dependent upon judgments about just and unjust coercion that are fundamentally different from our own.
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160.
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James P. Gubbins
Grief's Lesson in Moral Epistemology:
A Phenomenological Investigation
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This paper considers the thesis that grief holds special and significant moral knowledge. First, I argue that grief recognizes and responds to moral good. Second, I argue that grief holds special moral knowledge by contending that the goodness of the unique other and the unique love for the other are made conspicuous and thus specially known in grief. Third, I argue that grief holds significant moral knowledge. The griever has significant moral knowledge of her radical bond with a unique other. Also, grief's moral knowledge has a significant impact on the character of the griever. Furthermore, grief's moral knowledge is significant for moral psychology by highlighting the relationship among uniqueness, radical interdependence, and human good.
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