Showing
1 - 2
results of
2
for search '
Alfano, Mark, 1983-
'
Skip to content
VuFind
Login to My Library Account
All Fields
Title
Title Begins With
Journal Title
Journal Title Begins With
Author
Subject
Subject Begins With
Call Number
Government Document Number
Standard Number (ISBN, ISSN, etc.)
OCLC/Bibliographic Control Number Number
HRID
Browse Alphabetically: By Topic
Browse Alphabetically: By Author
Browse Alphabetically: By Title
Browse Alphabetically: By Call Number
Browse By Subject
Browse By Author
Browse By Title
SolrAuthor
-- Title
-- Title Begins With
-- Journal Title
-- Journal Title Begins With
-- Author
-- Subject
-- Subject Begins With
-- Call Number
-- Government Document Number
-- Standard Number (ISBN, ISSN, etc.)
-- OCLC/Bibliographic Control Number Number
-- HRID
Search
Advanced
Author
Alfano, Mark, 1983-
Mark Alfano
Mark Alfano
is an American philosopher and associate professor of
Philosophy
at
Macquarie University
. He is the editor of ''The Moral Psychology of the Emotions,'' a series of books published by
Rowman & Littlefield
. Alfano is known for his research on
virtue ethics
.,
virtue epistemology
,
social epistemology
, and
Friedrich Nietzsche
.
Provided by Wikipedia
Showing
1 - 2
results of
2
for search '
Alfano, Mark, 1983-
'
, query time: 0.01s
Refine Results
Results per page
10
20
40
60
80
100
Sort
Relevance
Date Descending
Date Ascending
Call Number
Author
Title
Select Page | with selected:
Email
Export
Print
Save
Select result number 1
1
Nietzsche's moral psychology
by
Alfano, Mark, 1983
-
Published 2019
Call Number:
Loading…
Located:
Loading…
Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year)
Book
Save to List
Saved in:
Select result number 2
2
Perspectives on Trust in the History of Philosophy
Published 2024
Other Authors:
Call Number:
Loading…
Located:
Loading…
Book
Loading…
Save to List
Saved in:
Select Page | with selected:
Email
Export
Print
Save
Search Tools:
RSS Feed
–
Email Search
Related Subjects
Ethics
Moral and ethical aspects
Political and social views
Psychology
Trust