‘Methodological Anarchy’: Arguing about War—and Getting It Right. Brian Orend, The Morality of Wardoi:10.1080/15027570701539511George R. Lucas JrStockdale Center for Ethical LeadershipJournal of Military EthicsLucas, G. R., Jr. (2007). Methodological anarchy: Arguing about war- and getting it...
Lucas, G. R., Jr. (2007). Methodological anarchy: Arguing about war- and getting it right. JournalofMilitary Ethics, 6(3), 246-252.Lucas, George R Jr. 2007. "Methodological Anarchy: Arguing about War, and Getting it Right," Journal of Military Ethics, 6, no. 3: 246-252....
Orend is an active, award-winning writer and public speaker. He focuses on three topics: 1) war and peace; 2) human rights; and 3) happiness. He is perhaps best-known for his work on “justice after war”, i.e., the ethics of post-war reconstruction. Orend is the author of six...
I really am interested, because this film haunts me not so much for its over indulgence in the horror of living, and the violence of dying, but the fact that it is feebly trying to polemicize these things with a beautifully thin tapestry of words, images, and actions that veil the asser...
Until the outbreak of World War I, vagrants and beggars were depicted as a group lacking the basic elements of morality, which the national elite considered its own identity-maker. Unwillingness to work, filth, drunkenness, ignorance, and contagious diseases were depicted as the visible features ...