Legal, Moral, and Metaphysical Truths
The Philosophy of Michael Moore
Herausgeber: Ferzan, Kimberly Kessler; Morse, Stephen J
Legal, Moral, and Metaphysical Truths
The Philosophy of Michael Moore
Herausgeber: Ferzan, Kimberly Kessler; Morse, Stephen J
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Reviewing the work of legal philosopher Michael S. Moore, this volume examines how crimes ought to be defined, what justifies punishment, what moral commitments underlie the law, how our understanding of concepts such as causation impact law and morality, and how psychiatry and cognitive neuroscience relate to law.
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Reviewing the work of legal philosopher Michael S. Moore, this volume examines how crimes ought to be defined, what justifies punishment, what moral commitments underlie the law, how our understanding of concepts such as causation impact law and morality, and how psychiatry and cognitive neuroscience relate to law.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 490
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Mai 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 170mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 975g
- ISBN-13: 9780198703242
- ISBN-10: 0198703244
- Artikelnr.: 47869151
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 490
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Mai 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 170mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 975g
- ISBN-13: 9780198703242
- ISBN-10: 0198703244
- Artikelnr.: 47869151
Kimberly Kessler Ferzan is Harrison Robertson Professor of Law and Caddell and Chapman Professor of Law at the University of Virginia. Stephen J. Morse, a lawyer and board-certified forensic psychologist, is Ferdinand Wakeman Hubell Professor of Law, Professor of Psychology and Law in Psychiatry, and Associate Director of the Center for Neuroscience & Society at the University of Pennsylvania.
* 1: Kimberly Kessler Ferzan and Stephen J. Morse: Editors'
Introduction
* 2: Heidi M. Hurd: Living With Genius: The Life and Work of Michael S.
Moore
* 3: Mitchell N. Berman: Modest Retributivism
* 4: Douglas Husak: What Do Criminals Deserve?
* 5: Peter Westen: Retributive Desert as Fair Play
* 6: Victor Tadros: The Wrong and the Free
* 7: R A Duff: Legal Moralism and Public Wrongs
* 8: Gideon Yaffe: Moore in Jeopardy Again
* 9: Leo Katz: Do We Need a Doctrine of Complicity?
* 10: Kenneth W. Simons: Reluctant Pluralist: Moore on Negligence
* 11: John Oberdiek: Putting (and Keeping) Proximate Cause in its Place
* 12: Richard W. Wright: Moore on Causation and Responsibility:
Metaphysics or Intuition?
* 13: Horacio Spector: The Moral Asymmetry Between Acts and Omissions
* 14: Richard Fumerton: Moore and the Metaphysics of Causation
* 15: Kimberly Kessler Ferzan: Self Defense: Tell Me Moore
* 16: Stephen J. Morse: Moore on the Mind
* 17: Larry Alexander: The Means Principle
* 18: Phillip Montague: Moral Dilemmas and Moral Theory: Toward a
Viable Deontology
* 19: Jeremy Waldron: "Just No Damned Good "
* 20: Michael H. Shapiro: Conceptual Breakage and Reconstruction:
Michael S. Moore's Natural Law Theory of Interpretation
* 21: Brian H. Bix: Metaphysical Realism and Legal Reasoning
* 22: Leslie Green: Law and the Role of a Judge
* 23: Michael S. Moore: Responses and Appreciations
Introduction
* 2: Heidi M. Hurd: Living With Genius: The Life and Work of Michael S.
Moore
* 3: Mitchell N. Berman: Modest Retributivism
* 4: Douglas Husak: What Do Criminals Deserve?
* 5: Peter Westen: Retributive Desert as Fair Play
* 6: Victor Tadros: The Wrong and the Free
* 7: R A Duff: Legal Moralism and Public Wrongs
* 8: Gideon Yaffe: Moore in Jeopardy Again
* 9: Leo Katz: Do We Need a Doctrine of Complicity?
* 10: Kenneth W. Simons: Reluctant Pluralist: Moore on Negligence
* 11: John Oberdiek: Putting (and Keeping) Proximate Cause in its Place
* 12: Richard W. Wright: Moore on Causation and Responsibility:
Metaphysics or Intuition?
* 13: Horacio Spector: The Moral Asymmetry Between Acts and Omissions
* 14: Richard Fumerton: Moore and the Metaphysics of Causation
* 15: Kimberly Kessler Ferzan: Self Defense: Tell Me Moore
* 16: Stephen J. Morse: Moore on the Mind
* 17: Larry Alexander: The Means Principle
* 18: Phillip Montague: Moral Dilemmas and Moral Theory: Toward a
Viable Deontology
* 19: Jeremy Waldron: "Just No Damned Good "
* 20: Michael H. Shapiro: Conceptual Breakage and Reconstruction:
Michael S. Moore's Natural Law Theory of Interpretation
* 21: Brian H. Bix: Metaphysical Realism and Legal Reasoning
* 22: Leslie Green: Law and the Role of a Judge
* 23: Michael S. Moore: Responses and Appreciations
* 1: Kimberly Kessler Ferzan and Stephen J. Morse: Editors'
Introduction
* 2: Heidi M. Hurd: Living With Genius: The Life and Work of Michael S.
Moore
* 3: Mitchell N. Berman: Modest Retributivism
* 4: Douglas Husak: What Do Criminals Deserve?
* 5: Peter Westen: Retributive Desert as Fair Play
* 6: Victor Tadros: The Wrong and the Free
* 7: R A Duff: Legal Moralism and Public Wrongs
* 8: Gideon Yaffe: Moore in Jeopardy Again
* 9: Leo Katz: Do We Need a Doctrine of Complicity?
* 10: Kenneth W. Simons: Reluctant Pluralist: Moore on Negligence
* 11: John Oberdiek: Putting (and Keeping) Proximate Cause in its Place
* 12: Richard W. Wright: Moore on Causation and Responsibility:
Metaphysics or Intuition?
* 13: Horacio Spector: The Moral Asymmetry Between Acts and Omissions
* 14: Richard Fumerton: Moore and the Metaphysics of Causation
* 15: Kimberly Kessler Ferzan: Self Defense: Tell Me Moore
* 16: Stephen J. Morse: Moore on the Mind
* 17: Larry Alexander: The Means Principle
* 18: Phillip Montague: Moral Dilemmas and Moral Theory: Toward a
Viable Deontology
* 19: Jeremy Waldron: "Just No Damned Good "
* 20: Michael H. Shapiro: Conceptual Breakage and Reconstruction:
Michael S. Moore's Natural Law Theory of Interpretation
* 21: Brian H. Bix: Metaphysical Realism and Legal Reasoning
* 22: Leslie Green: Law and the Role of a Judge
* 23: Michael S. Moore: Responses and Appreciations
Introduction
* 2: Heidi M. Hurd: Living With Genius: The Life and Work of Michael S.
Moore
* 3: Mitchell N. Berman: Modest Retributivism
* 4: Douglas Husak: What Do Criminals Deserve?
* 5: Peter Westen: Retributive Desert as Fair Play
* 6: Victor Tadros: The Wrong and the Free
* 7: R A Duff: Legal Moralism and Public Wrongs
* 8: Gideon Yaffe: Moore in Jeopardy Again
* 9: Leo Katz: Do We Need a Doctrine of Complicity?
* 10: Kenneth W. Simons: Reluctant Pluralist: Moore on Negligence
* 11: John Oberdiek: Putting (and Keeping) Proximate Cause in its Place
* 12: Richard W. Wright: Moore on Causation and Responsibility:
Metaphysics or Intuition?
* 13: Horacio Spector: The Moral Asymmetry Between Acts and Omissions
* 14: Richard Fumerton: Moore and the Metaphysics of Causation
* 15: Kimberly Kessler Ferzan: Self Defense: Tell Me Moore
* 16: Stephen J. Morse: Moore on the Mind
* 17: Larry Alexander: The Means Principle
* 18: Phillip Montague: Moral Dilemmas and Moral Theory: Toward a
Viable Deontology
* 19: Jeremy Waldron: "Just No Damned Good "
* 20: Michael H. Shapiro: Conceptual Breakage and Reconstruction:
Michael S. Moore's Natural Law Theory of Interpretation
* 21: Brian H. Bix: Metaphysical Realism and Legal Reasoning
* 22: Leslie Green: Law and the Role of a Judge
* 23: Michael S. Moore: Responses and Appreciations