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Contents:
- Itroduction: Wittgensteinian approaches to moral philosophy
- Relational views of ethical obligation in Wittgenstein, Levinas and Logstrup
- Of dictators and greengrocers: On the repressive grammar of values-discourse
- Wittgenstein, meta-ethics and the subject matter of moral philosophy
- Wittgenstein anti-anti realism: One 'anti' too many?
- Second nature, habitus, and the ethical: Remarks on Wittgenstein and Bourdieu
- Does morality have a point?
- If killing isn't wrong, then nothing is: A naturalistic defence of basic moral certainty
- On 'Being forced to be free': Between republican and liberal freedom
- Criticizing common sense about war and posthumous harm
- Can groups have human rights?
- Reason with me: 'Confabulation' and interpersonal moral reasoning
- Are states entitled to default on the sovereign debts incurred by governments in the past?
- Rules and acts of considerateness: An example from Jane Austen
- The nature of modesty
- Corporate citizenship of multinational enterprises and financial performance: The moderating effect of operating in developing countries
- 'Thank God I failed': How much does a failed murder attempt transform the agent?
- Death and the afterlife: A review essay
- The argument from self-defeating beliefs against deontology
- Therapeutic arguments, spiritual exercises, or the care of the self: Martha Nussbaum, Pierre Hadot and Michael Faucaoult on ancient philosophy
- The impotence of the new: Political change in an age of invisible ideology
- Attitudes towards a Cordon sanitaire vis-a-vis extremist parties: Instrumental pragmatism, affective reactions, and democratic principles
- Husserl on personal aspects of moral normativity
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