Chapter 1 Acknowledgments Chapter 2 1. Concealed Weapons Chapter 3 2. Inner Workings Chapter 4 3. Having the Upper Hand Chapter 5 4. On the Receiving End Chapter 6 5. Reversing the Charges Chapter 7 6. Matters of Principle Chapter 8 7. Personnel Relations Chapter 9 Works Cited Chapter 10 Index Chapter 11 About the Author
J. Harvey is associate professor of philosophy at the University of Guelph.
Writing with majesty and grace, and passion and understanding,
Harvey challenges us to be our moral best by helping us to
understand the intricacies of wrongful behavior. This work sheds a
very bright light upon the road that we must travel if we are to
achieve the hope of humanity—that which separates us from all other
creatures—namely the possibility of mutual and abiding respect
between all human beings.
*Laurence Thomas, Syracuse University*
Without being ponderous, pretentious, or obscure, Harvey has made a
strong and striking contribution to the theory of oppression, and a
thought-provoking conceptualization of what 'moral' relations
consist in.
*Margaret Urban Walker, Donald J. Schuenke Chair in Philosophy,
Marquette University*
The book belongs in the personal library of anyone interested in
how non-peer relationship may become morally distorted.
*Dialogue*
A strong contribution to moral philosophy's emerging appreciation
of the importance of various kinds of relationships.
*J. Kellenberger*
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