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  1. The self and the future.Bernard Williams - 1970 - Philosophical Review 79 (2):161-180.
  • Marx and methodological individualism.Mark Warren - 1988 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 18 (4):447-476.
  • Pride, Shame and Guilt: Emotions of Self-Assessment.Laurence Thomas - 1988 - Philosophical Review 97 (4):585.
  • Ethics, Personal Identity, and Ideals of the Person.Samuel Scheffler - 1982 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 12 (2):229 - 246.
    It is not uncommon for contemporary moral philosophers to appeal, in support or in criticism of one moral theory or another, to supposed features of or facts about persons. Rawls, for example, maintains that ‘utilitarianism does not take seriously the distinction between persons,’ and that since ‘the correct regulative principle for anything depends on the nature of that thing,’ we should not expect utilitarianism to be the correct regulative scheme for human beings. Nozick, in a similar spirit, suggests that the (...)
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  • Planning for Mental Disorder.Jennifer Radden - 1992 - Social Theory and Practice 18 (2):165-186.
  • Choosing to refuse: Patients rights and psychotropic medication.Jennifer Radden - 1988 - Bioethics 2 (2):83–102.
  • Reasons and Persons.Joseph Margolis - 1986 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 47 (2):311-327.
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  • The Fragility of Goodness.Martha Nussbaum - 1986 - Journal of Philosophy 85 (7):376-383.
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  • The decline of guilt.Herbert Morris - 1988 - Ethics 99 (1):62-76.
  • Remorse and Agent-Regret.Marcia Baron - 1988 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 13 (1):259-281.
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  • Scheffler on Morality and Ideals of the Person.Stephen L. Darwall - 1982 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 12 (2):247 - 255.
    Scheffler's paper divides into two parts. In the first, he argues that Parfit's argument from the complex view of personal identity neither can, nor is intended to, establish any moral theory; in particular, it cannot establish utilitarianism. Rather, Parfit's aim must have been simply to weaken our attachment to non-utilitarian theories. In discovering that the only philosophically respectable view of personal identity holds it to consist simply in bodily or psychological continuities and connections, we come to see that the distinctness (...)
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  • Connections and Guilt.Sharon Bishop - 1987 - Hypatia 2 (1):7 - 23.
    Moral philosphy, in both the Kantian and Utilitarian traditions, has it as an ideal to provide a set of principles which dominate all other considerations and which will consistently resolve all moral problems. This is often taken to imply that guilt or remorse is irrational if it occurs in circumstances in which one does ones duty but also harms others. This essay explores the possibility of giving up this ideal in favor of a more complex view of morality in which (...)
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  • Involuntary sins.Robert Merrihew Adams - 1985 - Philosophical Review 94 (1):3-31.
  • Freedom and Resentment.Peter Strawson - 1962 - Proceedings of the British Academy 48:187-211.
    The doyen of living English philosophers, by these reflections, took hold of and changed the outlook of a good many other philosophers, if not quite enough. He did so, essentially, by assuming that talk of freedom and responsibility is talk not of facts or truths, in a certain sense, but of our attitudes. His more explicit concern was to look again at the question of whether determinism and freedom are consistent with one another -- by shifting attention to certain personal (...)
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  • Personal identity and the unity of agency: A Kantian response to Parfit.Christine M. Korsgaard - 1989 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 18 (2):103-31.
  • The Identity of the Self.Geoffrey Madell - 1983 - Philosophy 58 (223):130-132.
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