The International Encyclopedia of Ethics
11 Volume Set
2. Edition March 2021
7280 Pages, Hardcover
Handbook/Reference Book
The new edition of the definitive reference work on ethics, featuring hundreds of new and revised entries
Unmatched in scholarship and scope, the International Encyclopedia of Ethics is the most comprehensive and authoritative ethics resource of its kind. Available online or as an eleven-volume print set, the Encyclopedia espouses a broad vision of ethics that creates links to many other disciplines, including medicine, technology studies, computer science, business, religion, and law. Entries range in size from shorter definitions and biographies to extended treatments of major topics, and have been blind-reviewed by both the editorial team and an independent review board to ensure exceptional balance and accuracy throughout.
Building on its established strengths, the second edition of the Encyclopedia covers topics, movements, arguments, and figures in normative ethics, metaethics, and applied ethics, containing over 850 fully-cross-referenced A-Z entries which emphasize the richness and diversity of the field. New to this edition are more than 300 original and updated entries which add coverage of contemporary topics including voting ethics, artificial intelligence, moral uncertainty, police bias, narcissism, structural injustice, bullying, biopolitics, legal moralism, and intellectual virtue. In its state-of-the-art electronic form, each entry is hyperlinked to other entries and to electronic editions of the renowned Blackwell Companions and Guides ? in all, more than 1,500 scholarly articles. The electronic version will continue to receive annual updates, continuing the legacy of the International Encyclopedia of Ethics as the preferred resource for research-active scholars, students, and general readers wanting to engage with ethics in their professional lives.
This work is also available as an online resource at www.internationalencyclopediaofethics.com
Editors vii
Contributors xi
Alphabetical List of Entries xxvii
List of Entries by Topic xxxviii
Introduction to the Second Edition lxxxii
Introduction to the First Edition lxxxiii
Acknowledgments lxxxviii
A 1
Volume II
B-C 521
Volume III
C-D 1169
Volume IV
E-F 1811
Volume V
G-H 2473
Volume VI
I-L 3073
Volume VII
M-N 3735
Volume VIII
O-P 4447
Volume IX
Q-R 5149
Volume X
S-T 5667
Volume XI
U-Z 6347
Index 000
Gillian Brock is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. She has published widely on issues in political and social philosophy, ethics, applied ethics, and several inter-disciplinary fields. Her books include Justice for People on the Move: Migration in Challenging Times (Cambridge University Press, 2020), Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account (Oxford University Press, 2009), Global Health Ethics: New Challenges (with Solomon Benatar, Cambridge 2020), Debating Brain Drain (with Michael Blake, Oxford 2015), and Political Theory and Migration (Polity, 2021). While a recent fellow at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University, she worked on problems of corruption in a globalized world and how to address them. She has held more than 20 editorial roles and is currently Associate Editor for the journal, Politics, Philosophy and Economics.
John Deigh is Professor of Law and Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of The Sources of Moral Agency (1996), Emotions, Values and Law (2008) and An Introduction to Ethics (2010). He was the editor of Ethics from 1997 to 2008.
Jules Holroyd is a Lecturer at University of Sheffield in the Department of Philosophy, and co-director of the Center for Engaged Philosophy. Their research interests are in moral psychology, political philosophy, and feminist philosophy, with a focus on ways in which we are implicated in and complicit in injustices. They are the author of over 30 journal articles and book chapters.
Daniel Star is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Boston University. He is the author of Knowing Better: Virtue, Deliberation, and Normative Ethics (2015) in addition to numerous journal articles, and recently edited History of Ethics: Essential Readings with Commentary (Wiley Blackwell, 2019).
Sarah Stroud holds degrees from Harvard University and Princeton University and is Associate Professor of Philosophy at McGill University. She has published widely on topics spanning moral theory, metaethics, moral psychology, and related areas in venues such as Ethics, Philosophy & Public Affairs, Philosophy & Phenomenological Research, Philosophical Studies, and the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. She co-edited, with Christine Tappolet, Weakness of Will and Practical Irrationality (OUP, 2003). She is an Executive Editor of the Canadian Journal of Philosophy.