10 found
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  1. Choosing to Feel. Virtue, Friendship, and Compassion for Friends.Diana Fritz Cates, Pamela M. Hall, G. Simon Harak, James F. Keenan, Daniel Mark Nelson & Paul J. Waddell - 1997 - Journal of Religious Ethics 26 (1):189-215.
    We are currently seeing a revival of interest in Aquinas's moral thought among Christian ethicists, both Protestant and Catholic. Although recent studies of his moral thought have touched on a number of topics, the majority of these have focused on his account of the virtues and their place in the Christian life. Probing the questions of the relation of virtue and law, the role of reason and will, and the place of the passions in Aquinas's moral theology, I will examine (...)
     
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  2.  55
    Limits of the Story: Tragedy in Recent Virtue Ethics.Pamela M. Hall - 2004 - Studies in Christian Ethics 17 (3):1-10.
    I examine the role of tragedy within the ethics of Alasdair MacIntyre and Iris Murdoch. MacIntyre argues for a narrative conception of the self, stressing the need for coherence and intelligibility and for the virtues which promote them. Tragic dilemma presents a successful self with severe frustration but not with destruction of its overall project. Murdoch, on the other hand, holds little hope for the self's coherence, and in fact champions tragic art's capacity for disturbing and even disrupting the self's (...)
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  3.  61
    From justified discrimination to responsive hiring: The role model argument and female equity hiring in philosophy.Pamela Courtenay Hall - 1993 - Journal of Social Philosophy 24 (1):23-45.
  4. Feminism and the Canon.Pamela Hall - 1991 - Journal of Philosophy 88 (10):568-569.
  5.  40
    Goerner on Thomistic Natural Law.Pamela Hall - 1990 - Political Theory 18 (4):638-649.
  6.  10
    Narrative and the Natural Law: An Interpretation of Thomistic Ethics.Pamela M. Hall - 1994
    With Narrative and the Natural Law Pamela Hall brings Thomistic ethics into conversation with ongoing debates in contemporary moral philosophy, especially virtue theory and moral psychology, and with current trends in narrative theory and the philosophy of history. Pamela M. Hall's study offers a solid, challenging alternative to rigid, legalistic interpretations of the substantial discussion of law in Aquinas's Summa theologiae and defends Aquinas's ethics from charges of excessive legalism. Hall argues that Aquinas's characterization of the content and relationship of (...)
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  7.  54
    (1 other version)Towards a Narrative Understanding of Thomistic Natural Law.Pamela M. Hall - 1992 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 2:53-73.
  8.  46
    The Mysteriousness of the Good.Pamela Hall - 1990 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 64 (3):313-329.
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  9. Virtue Ethics Old and New. [REVIEW]Pamela M. Hall - 2008 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 46 (2):332-332.
    Anyone paying the least attention to philosophy in the last four decades cannot fail to have noticed the revival of virtue ethics in Anglo-American moral philosophy. This revival, with its roots in post-war Oxford and Cambridge, has sought to reconnect ethics with the vocabulary and concepts of the ancient Greeks. By recourse to its vocabulary of virtue, moral theorists have sought a richer and deeper moral psychology as well as consideration of nature and teleology. The movement has bred some of (...)
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  10.  22
    Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy; Volume VI. [REVIEW]Pamela Hall - 1990 - Review of Metaphysics 43 (3):619-620.
    This collection brings together essays by various scholars on topics in ancient philosophy from Heraclitean paradox to Ciceronian ethics. While the essays are dense and often highly technical, the collection as a whole does not succumb to the temptation of mere technicality; the issues discussed here are of real philosophical interest and value.
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