Preface |
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ix | |
Acknowledgments |
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xi | |
PART ONE WHAT CAN WE KNOW? |
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1 | (100) |
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3 | (96) |
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1 From Meditations on First Philosophy |
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6 | (28) |
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2 From An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding |
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34 | (30) |
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3 Cartesian Skepticism and Inference to the Best Explanation |
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64 | (7) |
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4 From Science as Social Knowledge |
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71 | (7) |
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5 The 'Maleness' of Reason |
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78 | (5) |
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83 | (4) |
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7 It Is Wrong, Everywhere, Always, and for Anyone, to Believe Anything upon Insufficient Evidence |
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87 | (16) |
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Epistemology: Suggestions for Further Reading |
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99 | (2) |
PART TWO WHAT CAN WE KNOW ABOUT THE NATURE AND EXISTENCE OF GOD? |
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101 | (112) |
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103 | (8) |
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106 | (1) |
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9 In Behalf of the Fool: An Answer to the Argument of Anselm in the Proslogium |
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107 | (4) |
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10 The Ontological Argument |
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111 | (12) |
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11 The Cosmological Argument |
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123 | (10) |
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12 From Dialogues concerning Natural Religion |
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133 | (8) |
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13 The Argument from Design |
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141 | (10) |
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151 | (3) |
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15 The Recombinant DNA Debate: A Difficulty for Pascalian-Style Wagering |
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154 | (1) |
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16 A Central Theistic Argument |
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155 | (12) |
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167 | (9) |
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176 | (14) |
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19 Male-Chauvinist Religion |
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190 | (11) |
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20 Divine Racism: A Philosophical and Theological Analysis |
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201 | (11) |
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Religion: Suggestions for Further Reading |
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212 | (1) |
PART THREE ARE WE EVER FREE? |
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213 | (64) |
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215 | (3) |
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21 From The System of Nature |
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218 | (7) |
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225 | (6) |
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23 Human Freedom and the Self |
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231 | (8) |
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24 Alternate Possibilities and Moral Responsibility |
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239 | (7) |
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25 How to Complete the Compatibilist Account of Free Action |
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246 | (11) |
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JAMES P. STERBA AND JANET A. KOURANY |
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26 Living without Free Will: The Case for Hard Incompatibilism |
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257 | (10) |
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27 Metaethics, Metaphilosophy, and Free Will Subjectivism |
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267 | (9) |
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Freedom and Determinism: Suggestions for Further Reading |
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276 | (1) |
PART FOUR DOES OUR EXISTENCE HAVE A MEANING OR PURPOSE? |
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277 | (86) |
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279 | (1) |
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279 | (9) |
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29 The Absurdity of Life without God |
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288 | (14) |
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30 On the Vanity of Existence |
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302 | (3) |
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305 | (8) |
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32 Existentialism Is a Humanism |
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313 | (9) |
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322 | (8) |
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34 What Makes Life Worth Living? |
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330 | (7) |
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337 | (16) |
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36 Tolstoi and the Meaning of Life |
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353 | (8) |
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The Meaning of Life: Suggestions for Further Reading |
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361 | (2) |
PART FIVE HOW SHOULD WE LIVE? |
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363 | (156) |
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365 | (2) |
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37 Morality as Good in Itself |
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367 | (7) |
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38 The Problem of Rationality: Is Morality Rationally Required? |
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374 | (9) |
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383 | (16) |
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40 Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals |
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399 | (15) |
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41 From Two Treatises of Government |
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414 | (7) |
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42 From A Theory of Justice |
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421 | (24) |
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445 | (10) |
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44 Gender Inequality and Cultural Difference |
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455 | (15) |
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45 Race/Gender and the Ethics of Difference |
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470 | (8) |
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46 A Response to Jane Flax |
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478 | (4) |
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47 Equality, Discrimination and Preferential Treatment |
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482 | (8) |
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48 All Animals Are Equal... |
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490 | (15) |
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49 The Ethics of Respect for Nature |
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505 | (14) |
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Ethics: Suggestions for Further Reading |
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519 | (1) |
Index |
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520 | |