Dr Peter A. French is the Lincoln Chair in Ethics, Professor of Philosophy and the Director of the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics at Arizona State University. He is the author of twenty books including, most recently, Ethics and College Sports (2004), The Virtues of Vengeance (2001) and Cowboy Metaphysics: Ethics and Death in Westerns (1997). He is a senior and founding editor of Midwest Studies in Philosophy and his articles have appeared in numerous philosophical and legal journals.
1. The two-collar conflict: a philosopher's memoir of the Iraq War
2. Our better angels have broken wings: human nature and the nature of evil
3. Responsibility for innocence lost
4. Virtuous responses to moral evil
5. Assessing attempts at moral originality
6. Public and private honor, shame, and the appraising audience
7. Torture
8. Community and worthwhile living in Second Life
9. Of merels and morals: musts and oughts
10. Inference gaps in moral assessment: individuals, organizations, and institutions
11. Blaming whole populations: the American people and the Iraq War
12. The moral challenge of collective memories
13. Corporate responsibility and punishment redux
14. Mission creep.
1. The two-collar conflict: a philosopher's memoir of the Iraq War; 2. Our better angels have broken wings: human nature and the nature of evil; 3. Responsibility for innocence lost; 4. Virtuous responses to moral evil; 5. Assessing attempts at moral originality; 6. Public and private honor, shame, and the appraising audience; 7. Torture; 8. Community and worthwhile living in Second Life; 9. Of merels and morals: musts and oughts; 10. Inference gaps in moral assessment: individuals, organizations, and institutions; 11. Blaming whole populations: the American people and the Iraq War; 12. The moral challenge of collective memories; 13. Corporate responsibility and punishment redux; 14. Mission creep.