Mark Timmons: Introduction
1: Robin S. Dillon: Old-Fashioned Vices and Contemporary Crises or
It Matters How You Value Yourself
2: Joseph Bowen: Robust Rights and Harmless Wrongdoing
3: Adam Cureton: Solidarity in Kantian Moral Theory
4: Jessica J. T. Fischer: The Individualist Objection: Or Why Ex
Ante Probabilities Aren t Always Individualistic
5: Jamie Dreier: Blessed Lives, Bright Prospects, Incompetent
Orderings
6: Ralph Wedgwood: The Reasons Aggregation Theorem
7: Emma Duncan: The Normative Burdens of Trust
8: Mark Schroeder: Attributive Silencing
9: Maria Seim: The Standing to Forgive
10: Mike Deigan: Offsetting Harm
11: Sarah McGrath: Please Keep Your Charity Out of My Agency:
Paternalism and the Participant Stance
12: Paul Hurley: The Consequentializing Argument Against
Consequentializing
13: Douglas W. Portmore: Moral Worth and Our Ultimate Concerns
Mark Timmons is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona. He is the co-editor of Kant on Practical Justification: Interpretive Essays (OUP, 2013) and Reason, Value, and Respect: Kantian Themes from the Philosophy of Thomas E. Hill, Jr. (OUP, 2015) and author of Significance and System: Essays on Kant's Ethics (OUP, 2017), and Kant's Doctrine of Virtue (OUP, 2021).
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