The President of Good and Evil reviewed by Dennis Altman The Age, May 1, 2004
| Abstract | Since their Puritan origins in the 17th century, American politicians have tended to speak in the language of divinely given morality. George W. Bush is not unique in his frequent references to the language of good and evil, just as he is not the first US politician to mangle the language. | |||||||||
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Yannick Vanderborght (2006). Peter Singer, The President of Good and Evil: Taking George W. Bush Seriously (London: Granta Books, 2004), Pp. V + 280. Utilitas 18 (04):448-.
John F. Crosby (2001). Is All Evil Really Only Privation? Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 75:197-209.
Michael Gelven (1998). This Side of Evil. Marquette University Press.
William Hart (2004). Evil: A Primer: A History of a Bad Idea From Beelzebub to Bin Laden. Thomas Dunne Books.
Steven J. Jensen (2010). Good and Evil Actions: A Journey Through Saint Thomas Aquinas. Catholic University of America Press.
Hans Schwarz (1995/2001). Evil: A Historical and Theological Perspective. Academic Renewal Press.
Lars Fr H. Svendsen (2010). A Philosophy of Evil. Dalkey Archive Press.
Charlene P. E. Burns (ed.) (2009). Mis/Representing Evil: Evil in an Interdisciplinary Key. Inter-Disciplinary Press.
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