Sissela Bok
Appearance
Sissela Bok (nata Sissela Myrdal in Suecia die 2 Decembris 1934) est philosophus et ethicista Americana, filia duorum acceptorum Praemii Nobeliani: Gunnar Myrdal, qui praemium in oeconomia (cum Friderico Hayek) anno 1974, et Alva Myrdal, quae praemium pacis anno 1982 accepit. Praecipue mota est ab operibus Ioannia Pauli Sartre, [1] Ioannae Hersch,[2] et Michaelis Montani.[3]
Libri
[recensere | fontem recensere]- Lying: Moral Choice in Public and Private Life (Pantheon Books, 1978; Vintage paperback editions, 1979, 1989, 1999).
- Secrets: on the Ethics of Concealment and Revelation (Pantheon Books, 1982; Vintage paperback editions, 1984, 1989).
- A Strategy for Peace: Human Values and the Threat of War (Pantheon Books, 1989; Vintage paperback edition, 1990).
- Alva Myrdal: A Daughter's Memoir (Addison-Wesley, 1991; paperback edition 1992).
- Common Values (University of Missouri Press, 1995; paperback edition 2002).
- Mayhem: Violence as Public Entertainment (Perseus, 1998; paperback edition 1999).
- Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide, cum Gerald Dworkin et Ray Frey (Cambridge University Press, 1998).
- Exploring Happiness: From Aristotle to Brain Science (Yale University Press, 2010).[4]
Nexus interni
Notae
[recensere | fontem recensere]- ↑ Bok 1991.
- ↑ Sissela Bok, "Jeanne Hersch: L'étonnement philosophique," alumni.ecolint.net.
- ↑ Bok 2021.
- ↑ Nagel 2010.
Bibliographia
[recensere | fontem recensere]- Bok, Sissela. 1991. Reassessing Sartre. Harvard Review of Philosophy 1(1):48–58.
- Bok, Sissela. Jeanne Hersch: L'étonnement philosophique. Apud alumni.ecolint.net.
- Bok, Sissela. 2012. Rereading Montaigne’s last essays. The Chautauquan Daily, 27 Iunii.
- Nagel, Thomas. 2010. Who Is Happy and When? The New York Review of Books, 22 Decembris.