

VOLUME TWENTY
- SPRING 1998
- Arran E. Gare: MacIntyre, Narratives, and Environmental
Ethics
- M. M. Van de Pitte: "The Female is Somewhat Duller":
The Constructin ofthe Sexes in Ornithological Literature
- Gary Coglianese: Implications of Liberal Neutrality for
Environmental Policy
- David W. Kider: Culture and the Unconscious in Environmental
Ethics
- Annie L. Booth: Learning from Others: Ecophilosophy and
Traditional Native American Women's Lives
- SUMMER 1998
- Gabriela R. Carone: Plato and the Environment
- Yuriko Saito: Appreciating Nature on Its Own Terms
- Michel Dion: A Typology of Corporate Environmental Policies
- Warren Neill: An Emotocentic Theory of Interests
- Robert Hood: Rorty and Postmodern Environmental Ethics
- FALL 1998
- Julie Cook: The Philosophical Colonization of Ecofeminism
- Chris Crittenden: Subordinate and Oppressive Conceptual Frameworks:
A Defense of Ecofeminist Perspectives
- Jim Cheney: Universal Consideration: An Epistemological Map of the
Terrain
- Anthony Weston: Universal Consideration as Originary Practice
- Stan Godlovitch: Things Change: So Whither Sustainability?
- Claudia Drucker: Hanna Arendt on the Need for a Public Debate on Science
- Alan McQuillan: Passion and Instrumentality
- WINTER 1998
- Alastair Gunn: Environmental Ethics in an Urbanized World
- James P. Sterba: A Biocentrist Strikes Back
- Roy W. Perrett: Indigenous Rights and Environmental Justice
- Sandra B. Rosenthal and Rogene A. Buchholz:
Bridging Environmental and Intrinsic Values: A Pragmatic Framework
- Christopher J. Preston: Epistemology and Intrinsic Values: Norton and Callicott's
Critiques of Rolston