Karen Jones is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Melbourne. She received her PhD from Cornell University. She has written extensively about trust, what it is, and when it is justified. She also writes on moral epistemology, the emotions, and rationality. Much of her work is from a feminist perspective.
Francois Schroeter is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Melbourne, which he joined in 2003 after spending time at the University of Michigan and the ANU. He has written widely on metaethics and moral psychology.
1. Introduction, Francois Schroeter, Karen Jones, and Laura Schroeter 2. Humanity as an End in Itself, Julia Markovits 3. Three Kinds of Moral Rationalism, Michael Smith 4. Constitutivism about Reasons: Autonomy and Understanding, Karl Schafer 5. Constructing Practical Normativity, Nicholas Southwood 6. Moral Requirements and Permissions, and the Requirements and Permissions of Reason, Sarah Buss 7. Reasons and Justifiability, Laura Schroeter and Francois Schroeter 8. Rationalist Metaphysics, Semantics and Metasemantics, Mark van Roojen 9. Naturalistic Moral Realism, Rationalism,and Non-Fundamental Epistemology, Tristram McPherson 10. The Motivating Power of the A Priori Obvious, Ram Neta 11. Stupid Goodness, Garrett Cullity 12. What Does it Take to Act for Moral Reasons?, Alison Hills 13. Towards a Trajectory-Dependent Model of (Human) Rational Agency, Karen Jones 14. The Limits of Emotion in Moral Judgment, Joshua May
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