07-09-2010
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Ethics.be
 
Selection of articles
 The Law and 'We'
Bert van Roermund (2006)
 Subsidiarity: the Concept and the Connections
Jonathan Chaplin (1997)
 Multatuli Lecture 2003: Imprisoned by Categories. Fuelling Cultural Conflicts with Emotions and Stereotypes
David Grosmann (2004)
 The Ethics of the Physician-Patient Relationship
Reidar Lie (1997)
 Contents of the 1998 issues
various reviewers (1998)
 Palliative Care and Euthanasia: Belgian and Dutch Perspectives
Bert Broeckaert (2002)
 A Reciprocal Asymmetry? Levinas's Ethics Reconsidered
Tomáš Tatransky (2008)
 
Ethical Perspectives
Issue : 14/4 (December - 2007)
Wilderness, Wasteland, and Homeland. Comments on Drenthen
Nathan Edward Kowalsky
   Page : 457 - 478
  Judging a place as wasteland or homeland is a matter of perspective: presupposed values, knowledge through acquaintance, and comportment. Therefore, contra Martin Drenthen, the value of wilderness is a judgement call, not a conceptual necessity. I show this by first distinguishing wilderness from “wildness,” then culture from civilization, and finally, by situating Nietzsche’s teachings of the will to power in the context of a devalued world-view.

Nevertheless, I agree with Drenthen that some understandings of wilderness are more appropriate than others. When wild nature is understood to be “good” in an axiologically transcendent sense, morality and humanness per se are not undermined, and the transcendence of wildness is still sufficiently immanent to avoid the drive to devalue it. Even though such conceptualization can be attained by civilized urbanites, it seems to be optimally actualized in life by non-civilized cultures. This leads to implications that are not easy for us to accept, but deserve our serious consideration nonetheless.
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Recent issue  17/2 (2010)
Introduction
(Veerle Draulans)
On the Fragile Relationship between Empirics and Ethics
(Veerle Draulans)
Reflective Equilibrium as a Normative Empirical Model
(Ghislaine J.M.W. van Thiel)
Empirical Ethics and the Special Status of Practitioners' Judgements
(Bert Musschenga)
Empirical Ethics. The Case of Dignity in End-of-Life Decisions
(Carlo Leget)
Clarifying the Concept of Human Dignity in the Care of the Elderly. A Dialogue between Empirical and Philosophical Approaches
(Win Tadd)
Empirical Research and Family Ethics
(Annemie Dillen)
Respect for Autonomy and Authenticity. The Pastor's Responsiveness to the Person of the Pastoree
(Guus Timmerman)
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 Multatuli-lecture
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 Wetenschap en ethiek
       
 
 
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