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  1. Multidimensional thinking about force ethics: A matter of method and content.April L. Morgan - 2010 - Journal of Religious Ethics 38 (3):545-578.
    Analyses of religious and cultural perspectives on the use of force continue to receive criticism for questionable motives, for insufficient holism, and for exaggerating uniqueness. Claims of recurrent problems educe consideration of interdisciplinary proposals designed to resolve related challenges. Thought together, some suggest that a transversal research program into ethical orientations toward war can facilitate fair and rigorous exploration of crosscultural similarities and differences. Tentative findings emphasizing textual precepts indicate some resonance amid diversity across eleven ethical frameworks including Western just (...)
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  • James Turner Johnson, Just War Tradition, and Forms of Practical Reasoning.John Kelsay - 2009 - Journal of Military Ethics 8 (3):179-189.
    During the spring of 1981, students enrolled in James Childress’ University of Virginia seminar read a great many of the historic and contemporary treatments of just war and pacifist strands in Chr...
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