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Ethical Theory Review

Ethical Theory Review

By Bradford Cokelet

Interviews with authors of recent books in ethics and practical philosophy.

More information at www.ethicaltheoryreview.com
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Currently playing episode

Ethics of Gamete Donation and the Value of Genetic Knowledge

Ethical Theory ReviewFeb 16, 2022

00:00
01:01:45
How to Do Things with Emotions: Owen Flanagan
Apr 05, 202255:25
Confucianism, Morality, and Well-being
Mar 15, 202201:03:08
Ethics of Gamete Donation and the Value of Genetic Knowledge
Feb 16, 202201:01:45
Prophetic Pragmatism: Cornel West, Hope, and the Philosophy of Race
Feb 01, 202254:14
Grief: A Philosophic Guide
Jan 13, 202256:15
Freedom, Resentment, and the Metaphysics of Morals

Freedom, Resentment, and the Metaphysics of Morals

Would the discovery that determinism is true undermine moral responsibility?  Should it?  In this episode I interview Pamela Hieronymi about her new book Freedom, Resentment, and the Metaphysics of Morals, which offers a new interpretation of P.F. Strawson's influential argument that the discovery of determinism would and should not threaten our practices of moral responsibility. 

Apr 21, 202101:07:07
Religion and Human Development (Jennifer Herdt)

Religion and Human Development (Jennifer Herdt)

Humanists argue that there is something special about human beings and that to live well we must grow up, overcome our childish and brutish temptations, and become fully human.  Secular Enlightenment humanists think this is something human beings can and should try to pull off on their own – through personal and collective human efforts.  Religious Humanists raise worries about this secular program and emphasize the need for humility and divine agency or assistance.

I interview Jennifer Herdt (Yale Divinity School) about her new book, Forming Humanity, which explores what we can learn from German Enlightenment intellectuals and their debates about these issues.

Jul 08, 202059:31
Virtue and Meaning -- an Interview with David McPherson

Virtue and Meaning -- an Interview with David McPherson

Interview with David McPherson, Associate Professor  at Creighton University.  We discuss his new book, Virtue and Meaning, which develops and defends a new theory of human nature – the human being as the meaning seeking creature – and explores its implications for ethical theory.  We discuss David's criticism of Aristotelian Naturalists such as Foot, Hursthouse, and MacIntyre, his alternative account of moral virtue and the good life,  and his view that Aristotelian moral philosophers need to develop accounts of the cosmic meaning of human life and of human spirituality.

May 05, 202001:13:29