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Bibliography of Joseph Fletcher
Publications:1928-1977
Author's Preface
A request from the Editor for a brief foreword compels me to weigh myself in my own scales. At my age, the biographies recited by earnest chairmen at lectures I have been invited to deliver have come to sound more and more like obituaries, and I find the same thing applies to my bibliography. In any case, I can see that the bio- and the biblio- come to pretty much the same thing. If we publish, we publish ourselves; we are out in the open with no place to hide.
There are a couple of million words in these more than 225 items. Modest by comparison with Karl Barth's Brobdingnagian opus, but perhaps more than I needed. Some of it is arguably verbose, wasteful of the King's English. (Book reviews, dozens of them, are left out because they are mostly critical rather than constructive or original.) Unlike other bibliographies, this one is unselective; everything goes in. Incidentally, although they wish to remain anonymous, the basic digging for things prior to1950 was done by three students: one at Trinity College, Toronto, one at the Harvard Divinity School, and one (a trilingual German) at the Gregorian University in Rome. Since 1950, my wife and strength, Forrest, has helped immensely. The resulting list is nearly complete. Some missing things I can recall but cannot find; for example, an article that brought the House Un-American Activities
It may seem to some that lists of books are of interest mainly
for researchers, librarians, and cataloguers. We think they also provide clues
to the times and to the contributions of creative minds. THEOLOGY TODAY has
occasionally published bibliographies of this sort, and we are pleased to print
this list of Joseph Fletcher's publications covering nearly fifty years. There
are more than 200 items, not counting translations or book reviews. The items
are listed chronologically under the categories of Books, Symposia contributions,
Articles, Monographs, Prefaces, and inclusions in Anthologies.
One of the most disruptive, controversial, and exciting times in the whole field
of Christian ethics spanned the period of the past five decades. Not only do
Joseph Fletcher's writings comprise a map for that confusing territory, but
he himself was often right in the middle of the discussion and frequently in
advance of others. The situation ethics debate is still with us, surely a sign
that it touches sensitive nerves and probes basic issues. In the area of medical
ethics, the bibliography reminds us that Joseph Fletcher's Morals and Medicine
appeared more than twenty years ago. Unlike so many contemporary writers in
the religion field whose work is mostly derivative or comparative, Joseph Fletcher's
writings have been original, incisive, and fearless.
A graduate of the University of West Virginia, Berkeley Divinity School, and
London University, Joseph Fletcher was for many years the Robert Treat Paine
Professor of Social Ethics at the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Mass.
An ordained Episcopal priest, he served as Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in Cincinnati,
and he has lectured on countless campuses across the country. In recent years,
he has been associated with the Program in Human Biology and Society, the School
of Medicine, University of Virginia.
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Committee down on me in the50's in all its viciousness. I called it the Un-American Committee, and this was, of course, in the Joe McCarthy period of redbaiting assaults on civil liberties.
From first to last, this is all ethics, from 1928 to1977. It was all directed to economic and political problems before the Second World War, with a flurry of essays on the family in the early 40's. Some of the titles then reflect an Anglo-Catholic orientation which gradually died on the vine. The book about William Temple, a kind of theological portrait, gave me more pleasure in putting it together than any of the ten books I've worked on to date. Winston Churchill called him a "half crown in a ha'penny bazaar." One journal inadvertently sent me a copy for review; I wish now I'd done it. Much of Temple's classical "system" now seems, alas, almost unreal. Before 1966, my attention went entirely to normative questions-only en passant treatments of theory. Then came Situation Ethics, printed in the hundreds of thousands. I call it my "Fat Pamphlet" and still hope to take enough time off to elaborate it into a full dress philosophical-theological exposition.
In retrospect, we can see how moral philosophy in the20's focussed on the social sciences, looking for data and insights from economics, anthropology, and sociology. In the 30's we also turned to the behavioral sciences, hoping for more light on our conceptual categories-conscience, will, values, intention. Then in the 40's, with warforced technology followed by nuclear fission, we began looking at physics and chemistry, but our training in the humanities simply wasn't up to it. In the 50's ethical attention shifted again, this time to the biological front-dealing with new and debatable controls over life, death, health, and behavior as they emerged from medical science and medicine. My Morals and Medicine appeared in 1954, the first non-Catholic treatment of biomedical ethics. Now we speak more broadly of "bioethics."
Recently Princeton University Press recalled Morals and Medicine from Beacon Press, to whom they "farmed it out" in the 60's when Princeton had not yet started paperbacks. For 23 years now it has trundled along like an early morning milk train in the old pre-trucking days. Besides permitted translations, it has been pirated in Hindi and Swahili (I've never seen them). Not a great many non-fiction books last for more than 20 years. In 1954, it would have been wildly optimistic to think the case I made at that time for "voluntary medical euthanasia" would be enacted into law by the State of California in 1976 and endorsed by the Supreme Court of New Jersey. The same story can be told about abortion.
Reminiscence easily becomes a bore in the elderly. But I cannot help a remark about how far the case method has come in theological and ethical teaching since my paper on the subject far back in1934. It has taken 30 years to crystallize on a serious scale and is still a long way behind medical, legal, and business education. Trying to take ethics from deductive to inductive reasoning kept me busy for decades at the Episcopal Theological School and in the Musser Seminar at the Har-
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vard School of Business Administration. I tried to introduce it in Japan, as a Visiting Professor at the International Christian University in Tokyo in the60's, but it seemed to call for more initiative and confidence in the students than their academic tradition could absorb, at least at that time.
Billy Graham claims that it was situation ethics that led to the immorality and power lust of Watergate. The charge cannot stand up, even though the National Booksellers' Association included Situation Ethics in a gift of 50 volumes to Richard Nixon when he entered the White House. He never read it, of course. As a thesis about how to "do" ethics, it seems to win acceptance steadily in professional circles-except for professional religionists. It was heartwarming in 1971 to receive a volume by a theologian far away in Japan, Shin Ohara, on Situation Ethics in Prospect, looking forward to further gains for a situationist's approach to right-wrong and good-evil decisions.
My overall comment on the odyssey mirrored in this bibliography is an end-result conclusion, reached somewhat reluctantly but inevitably, that there is no more a Christian ethics than there is a Mohammedan mathematics or a Jewish geology. There are, of course, distinctly Christian beliefs about human nature and human destiny, as there are Muslim and Hindu beliefs. But this is meta-ethics, what goes "along with" ethics. Christians have no monopoly on love, and therefore no monopoly on moral perception or character.
My things have been written in between teaching regular courses and seminars, as well as (since 1966) 457 lectures in 449 different universities, colleges, and seminaries in the United States, plus 38 lectures in 15 other countries. How long it will go on I do not know, nor do I need to know.
BOOKS
The Church and Industry (with Spencer Miller). New York: Longmans, Green and Company,1930, xii +273 pp.
Christianity and Property (ed.). Philadelphia: Westminster Press,1947,221pp.
Morals and Medicine. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,1954,
xvii +243pp.
Victor Gollancz, London,1955, xvii +243pp.
Trans. T. Iwai. Seishen Shobo, Tokyo,1964, xvi +298pp.
Trans. A. Nazafati. Mehr-Tabriz, Teheran,1971,220pp.
Beacon Press, Boston,1960-1975, softbound, xxiii +243pp. (1976P.U.P. resumed
publication.)
William Temple: Twentieth Century Christian. New York: Seabury Press,1963, xii +372pp.
Situation Ethics: The New Morality. Philadelphia: Westminster Press,1966,176pp. (Also softbound.)
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SCM Press (Library of Philosophy and Theology). London,1966,176pp. (1968, softbound.)
Trans. H. Weissgerber. Gütersloher Verlagshaus, Gerd Mohn, Germany,1967,157pp.
(Retitled Moral ohne Normen?)
Trans. Tong Soo Kim. Ku Moon Gak, Seoul, Korea,1968,240 pp.
Trans. Catalan, J. Costa i Costa. Libros del Nopal, Barcelona,1969,258pp.
Trans. Spanish, J. M. Udina. Libros del Nopal, Madrid,1970,263pp.
Trans. Shin Ohara. Shinkyo Shuppansha, Tokyo,1971,310pp.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.1976. Government edition, embossed + large
type + voice recorded.
Moral Responsibility: Situation Ethics at Work. Philadelphia: Westminster
Press,1967,256pp. (Also softbound.)
SCM Press, London,1967,256pp. (Also softbound.)
Trans, H. Weissgerber, Gütersloher Verlagshaus, Gerd Mohn, Germany,1969,104pp.
(Retitled Leben ohne Moral?)
Trans. J. Ibern. Libros del Nopal, Editorial Ariel, Barcelona,1973,325 pp.
The Situation Ethics Debate (with Harvey Cox). Philadelphia: Westminster Press,1968,285pp. (Also softbound.)
Hello Lovers: An Introduction to Situation Ethics (with Thomas A. Wassmer, S.J.). New York: Corpus Books & World,1970, ix +147pp.
Situation Ethics: True or False (with John Montgomery). Minneapolis: Dimension Books,1972,90pp.
The Ethics of Genetic Control: Ending Reproductive Roulette. New York: Doubleday and Company,1974,218pp.
SYMPOSIA
"Social Forces and Family Pressures," The Church and the Family, National Council, Episcopal Church, New York,1939,82-97.
"The Family in the World Today," Towards a Christian Family, ed. D.A. McGregor, National Council, Episcopal Church, New York,1941,17-24.
"Development and Standards," Clinical Pastoral Training, ed. Seward Hiltner, Federal Council of Churches, New York,1945,1-4,31-36.
"The Ethics of Criminal Guilt," The Social Meaning of Legal Concepts, ed. Edmond N. Cahn, New York University School of Law, New York,1950,171-187.
"A Moral Philosophy of Sex," Sex and Religion Today, ed. Simon Doniger, Association Press, New York,1953,185-199.
"Morals and Medicine," Morals, Medicine and the Law, ed. Thomas A. Cowan, New York University Law Review,31(November,1955),1157-1245.
"The Patient's Right to Die," The Crisis in American Medicine, ed. M. K. Sanders, Harper and Brothers, New York,1960,128-137.
"Wealth and Taxation: The Ethics of Stewardship," Stewardship and
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Contemporary Theology, ed. T. K. Thompson, Association Press, New York,1960,204-227. (Also softbound.)
"William Temple," Handbook of Christian Theologians, ed. Dean Peerman and Martin Marty, World Publishing Company, New York,1965,233-255.
"Love and Justice Are the Same Thing," Lux in Lumine: Essays to Honor Norman Pittenger, ed. R. A. Norris, Seabury Press, New York,1966,129-143.
"Die Ethik des Naturrechts," Die Kirche als Faktor Einer Kommander Weltgemneinschaft, ed. W. A. Visser't Hooft, Kreuz, Stuttgart-Berlin,1966,162-179.
"Opinion is Divided," Abortion and the Law, ed. David Low, Pocket Books, Simon and Schuster, New York,1966,94-95.
"Anglican Theology and the Ethics of Natural Law," Christian Social Ethics in a Changing World, ed. John C. Bennett, Association Press, New York,1966,310-329.
"Situation Ethics Under Fire," Storm Over Ethics, ed. the publishers, United Church Press, Philadelphia,1967,149-173.
"Ethics and Unmarried Sex: Morals Reexamined," The99th Hour,ed. D.O. Price, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill,1967,97-112.
"The Protestant Churches," Birth Control: A Continuing Controversy, ed. E. T. Tyler, C.C. Thomas, Springfield,1967,99-106.
"About the Case Study Method," The Ethics of Decision Making, ed. Malcolm W. Eckel, Morehouse-Gorham, New York,1968,13-19.
"Elective Death," Ethical Issues in Medicine: The Role of the Physician in Today's Society, ed. E. Fuller Torrey, Little, Brown and Company, Boston,1969,139-157.
"What's In a Rule? A Situationist's View," Norm and Context in Christian Ethics, ed. Gene H. Outka and Paul Ramsey, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York,1968,275-301.
"Medicine's Scientific Developments and Ethical Problems," Dialogue in Medicine and Theology, ed. Dale White, Abingdon Press, Nashville,1968,101-133.
"American Pragmatism and the Problem of Theological Ethics," Religion in Modern Society, ed. W. H. Baumer, Buffalo Studies V, State University of New York at Buffalo Press,1968,90-110.
"Our Shameful Waste of Human Tissue," The Religious Situation1969, ed. D. A. Cutler, Beacon Press, Boston,1969,223-252.
"A Theological Approach to Prolonging Life," But Not to Lose, ed. A.H. Kutscher, F. Fell, Inc., New York,1969,115-117.
"ThePatient's Right to Die," Euthanasia and the Right to Death, ed. A.B. Downing, Peter Owen, London,1969,61-70.
"A Minister's View," Therapeutic Abortion, ed. J. F. Hulka, University Population Center, Chapel Hill,1969,37-39.
"Love is the Only Measure," Situationism and the New Morality, ed. R. L. Cunningham, Appleton, Century, Crofts, New York,1970,55-64.
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"Agreement and Disagreement," the same,79-83.
"A Situationist's Feedback," the same,273-281.
"Technological Devices in Medical Care," Who Shall Live?, ed. Kenneth Vaux, Fortress Press, Philadelphia,1970,115-142.
"The Right to Die," Euthanasie: het recht om te sterven, ed. H. A. Schreuder, Spectrum,1970, Antwerp/Utrecht,76-89.
"Abortion and the Protestant Churches," Abortion in a Changing World, ed. R. E. Hall, Columbia University Press,1970,11. 127-136.
"Medicine's Success Problem," Attitudes Toward Euthanasia, ed. K. Mali, Educational Fund, New York,1971,9-14.
"The Ethics of Abortion," Implementation of Legal Abortion: A National Problem, ed. G. B. Holsman, Harper and Row, New York,1971,1124-1129.
"Adelaide Teague Case," Notable American Women1667-1950, ed. T. James, J. W. James, P. S. Bowyer. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press,1971,1,301-302.
"Death and Burial: Wasting Human Tissue," Death and Dying, no ed., Marquette University (School of Medicine), Milwaukee,1971,5-9.
"The 'Right' to live and the 'Right' to Die," Vesper Exchange No.7, Vesper Center, San Leandro, California,1971,11-16.
"New Beginnings in Life: A Theologian's Response," The New Genetics and the Future of Man, ed. M. P. Hamilton, W. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids,1972,78-89.
"Not One Model Only," Marriage: For and Against, ed. H. H. Hart, Hart Publishing Company, New York,1972,188-202.
"Etica del Aborto," Cumplimiento de los Leyes sobre Aborto, ed. H. V. Trevino, Nueva Editorial Interamericano, Mexico City,1972,1124-1129.
"Regulation of Behavior," Ethical Issues in Biology and Medicine, ed. P. Wadham, Schenkman Publishing Company, Cambridge, Massachusetts,1973,175-176,190-191.
"Genetic Engineering: Evolution of a Technological Issue," Report, Committee on Science and Astronautics, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., Serial W, November,1972,64-76.
"Matters of Life and Death," Proceedings, Virginia Bar Association, ed. P. C. Manson, Bar Association, Richmond,1972,32-70.
"Ethics and Euthanasia," To Live and To Die, ed. R. H. Williams, Springer-Verlag, New York,1973,113-122.
"Medicine and the Nature of Man," The Teaching of Medical Ethics, ed. R. M. Veatch, W. Gaylin, and C. Morgan, Hastings Center Publications, Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y.,1973,47-58.
"Designed Genetic Changes in Man," Genetic Engineering: Evolutionof a Technological Issue, ed. J. McCullough, House Committee on Science and Astronautics, Washington, D.C., (1974),160-171.
"Euthanasia: A Moral Choice," Esprit d' aujourd'hui, no ed., Shobundo, Ltd., Tokyo,1974,38-44.
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"A New Look Inside," You're Alright Jack (honoring John Oliver Nelson), Kirkridge Center, Kirkridge, Pennsylvania,1975,3-4.
"The Right to Live and to Die," Beneficent Euthanasia, ed. M. Kohl, Prometheus Books, Buffalo,1975,44-53.
"Computers and Distributive Justice," Ethics and Health Policy, ed. R.M. Veatch and Roy Branson, Lippincott, Philadelphia,1976,197-215.
"Ethics and Feeding the Starving," Lifeboat Ethics: Morality and Hunger, ed. George Lucas, Harper and Row, New York,1976,53-72.
"In Verteidigung des Suizids" (trans. Günter Seib), Suizid und Euthanasie als Human- und Sozial-wissenschaftliches, ed. Albin Eser, Ferdinand Enke Verlag, Stuttgart,1976,233-244.
"No, Not to My Family You Don't," Proceedings, Medical Social Consultants, National Conference of Social Welfare, ed. R. White,1976,61-64.
"Ethical Considerations in Biomedical Research Involving Human Beings," Proceedings, International Conference on the Individual and the Community, ed. Bruce Dull, World Health Organization/World Medical Society, Geneva,1976,121-142.
"Give If It Helps But Not If It Hurts," World Hunger and Moral Obligation: Philosophical Perspectives, ed. H. LaFollette and W. Aiken, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., for1977,77-99.
"Situation Ethics," Encyclopedia of Bioethics, ed. W. T. Reich. New York: Free Press-Macmillan, for1977.
ARTICLES
The Spirit of Capitalism: Weber's Work," Christendom: A Journal of Christian Sociology (Oxford), I (March,1931),55-62.
"Catholic Social Reform in the Third Republic," Stockholm,3(1931),255-277.
"Religion in Social History: Ernst Troeltsch," Christendom: A Journal of Christian Sociology (Oxford),2(March,1932),54-61.
"The Catholic Revival: An American Viewpoint," Christendom: A Journal of Christian Sociology (Oxford),3(September,1933),207-210.
"Was the Early Church Communistic?" Living Church,91(November17,1934),615-617.
"The Church and Social Credit," Spirit of Missions,99(April,1934),173-176.
"A Case Study in Moral Theology," American Church Monthly,35(January,1934),38-43.
"Religion and Capitalism in History," Christendom: A Journal of Christian Sociology, (Oxford),4(June,1934),138-142.
"The Condition of Our Times," Anglican Theological Review,19 (April,1937),119-131.
"The Catholic Family: A Sociological Approach, Christendom: A Journal of Christian Sociology (Oxford),9(March,1939),26-35.
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"Is This War Different?" Christendom: A Journal of Christian Sociology (Oxford),10(March,1940),11-23.
"Social Training for the Pastoral Ministry," Anglican Theological Review,22(April,1940),121-134.
"The Meaning of the Malvern Declaration," Christendom: An Ecumenical Review (Chicago),6(Summer,1941),339-351.
"What Should Our Message Be?" Witness,19(August21,1941),7-8.
"Human Nature and Social Action," Journal of Bible and Religion,16(April,1948),85-89.
"Sex and Religion: A Twentieth Century Philosophy of Sex," Ladies Home Journal,76(March,1949),48-50.
"Euthanasia: Our Right to Die," Pastoral Psychology, I (April,1950),9-12.
"Dr. Fletcher Answers Some Question," Church Militant,54(February,1951),6-7,11.
"Our Right to Die," Theology Today,8(July,1951),202-212.
"Collectivism: Problem for Christian Ethics," Religion in Life,20(Autumn,1951),483-505.
"The Faith We Live By," Churchman,165(December15,1951),13-14.
"Concepts of Moral Responsibility," Journal of Pastoral Care,6(Spring,1952),39-45.
"Psychiatry and Religion: Conflict or Synthesis?" Journal of Pastoral Care,6(Summer,1952),12-18.
"A Moral Philosophy of Sex," Pastoral Psychology,4(February,1953),31-37.
"Christian Views on Human Labor1500-1860: From Martin Luther to Samuel Smiles," Historical Magazine of the Episcopal Church,24(March,1955),1-21.
"Medical Diagnosis: Our Right to Know the Truth," Pastoral Psychology,6(April,1955),49-54.
"The New Look in Christian Ethics," Harvard Divinity Bulletin,62(October,1959),7-18.
"Love Does Not Insist on Its Own Way: Planned Parenthood and Birth Control," Episcopal Theological School Journal,5(Fall,1954),4-7.
"Sex Ethics," Twentieth Century Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (Schaff-Herzog), ed. L. A. Loetscher, Baker Book House, Grand Rapids,1955,1123-1124. (Also, "Fleming James,""Abandonment," "Abortion Bigamy," "Chastity,""Continence," and "James Ward.")
"Sex Offenses: An Ethical View," Law and Contemporary Problems,25(Spring,1960),18-32.
"Situational Ethics: A Note to Business Management," Business Review,20(October,1960),18-32.
"The Patient's Right to Die," Harper's Magazine,221(October,1960),139-143.
"The American Shinto," Witness,45(November17,1960),7-11.
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"Modern Prophets: Novels," Episcopalian,125(December,1960),30-33.
"Dysthanasia," Folia Medica,8(January-March,1962),3-8.
"Anti-Dysthanasia: The Problem of Prolonging Death," Euthanasia Society Bulletin,15(Spring,1962),1-8.
"The Professions: A Theological Frontier," Episcopal Theological School Bulletin,54(July,1962),6-12.
"The End of the Era of Common Sense," Religion in Life,32(Spring,1963),238-246.
"A Moral Tension and an Ethical Frontier," The Christian Scholar,46(Fall,1963),256-266.
"Changing Sexual Mores: Toward a New Judeo-Christian Consensus," Current,44(December,1963),6-14.
"Christian Ethics in a New Key," Annals (International Christian University, Tokyo),1964,165-197.
"Doing the Truth: James Pike's Social Ethics," Church Review,22(December,1964),10-12.
"Death and Medical Initiative," Prism: The New Christian (London), No.92(December,1964),18-24.
"About Edmond Cahn," New York University Law Review,40(April,1965),215-216.
"Sex and Situation Ethics," Living Church,151(November21,1965)10-11.
"Family Dysfunction, East and West," Pastoral Psychology,16(April,1965),34-38.
"The New Morality: Ethics at the Crossroads," (with Herbert McCabe, O.P.), Commonweal,83(January14,1966),427-440.
"The Changing Church: What is the New Morality?" (with Herbert McCabe, O.P.) Current,71(March,1966),59-64.
"The New Morality: A Debate," Extra (University of Houston),3(June,1966),8-9.
"Why New? The New Morality," Religion in Life,35(Spring,1966),187-190.
"Christianity Not Religion," Pulpit,37(July-August,1966),18-21.
"The Issue of Culpability," Sandoz Psychiatric Spectator,4(November,1967),8-9.
"The Hippocratic Oath," Dictionary of Christian Ethics, ed. J. Macquarrie, Westminster Press, Philadelphia,1967,149-150. (Also "Medical Ethics,"210-212.)
"Christian Ethics in a New Key: Commentary," Perspective (Kenyon College),3(Winter,1967),3-7,19-21.
"Situation Ethics, the New Morality," Alumni Magazine (Rockford College),45(Winter,1968),12-17,27.
"Tillich and Ethics: The Negation of Law," Pastoral Psychology,19(February,1968),33-40.
"Rats and Ghettoes," Episcopal Theological School Bulletin,60(March,1968),16-17.
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"Human Experiments: Some Questions of Ethics" (with Charles K. Hofling), Postgraduate Medicine,43(March,1968),80-86.
"A Theologian Comments: The Right to Die," Atlantic Monthly,221(April,1968),59-64.
"When Should Patients Be Allowed to Die? Some Questions of Ethics" (with Charles K. Hofling), Postgraduate Medicine,43(May,1968),222-225.
"Charles West: Critique I," Theology Today,25(October,1968),366-368.
"Donor Nephrectomies and Moral Responsibility," Journal, American Medical Women's Association,12(December,1968),1085-1092.
"Naturalism, Situation Ethics and Value Theory," Episcopal Theological School Bulletin,62(March,1969),13-16.
"Virtue as a Predicate," Monist,54(January,1970),66-85.
"Power," Episcopal Theological School Bulletin,63(March,1970),5-6,28-29.
"Voluntary Euthanasia: The New Shape of Death," Medical Counterpoint,2(June,1970),13-22.
"Selective Conscience," Witness,55(August11,1970),8-10.
"A Quarter-Century of Christian Ethics at ETS: A Rear-View Mirror," Episcopal Theological School Bulletin,63(September,1970),17-21.
"Heart to Heart," Face to Face,3(November,1970),17-20.
"Responsible Decision Making," Theology Today,28(April,1971),90-92.
"Death Has Changed Its Shape," Japan Christian Quarterly,16(May,1971),57-62.
"A Prospect for Parsons," Journal of Pastoral Care,25(June,1971),82-88.
"Ethical Aspects of Genetic Control," New England Journal of Medicine,285(September30,1971),776-783.
"Harmon Smith: Ethics and the New Medicine," Wayne Law Review,17(September-October,1971),1342-1346.
"Situation Ethics in a Changing Situation," Christian Century,8(December8,1971),1044-1046.
"The Ethics of Abortion," Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology,14(December,1971),1124-1130.
"The Sex Book: From Prurience to Candor," Metanoia,4(February,1972),3-6.
"The Promothean Project and Pastoral Care," Pastoral Psychology,23(April,1972),7-14.
"Indicators of Hurnanhood: A Tentative Profile of Man," Hastings Center Report,2(November,1972),1-4.
"Ethics and Euthanasia," American Journal of Nursing,73(April,1973),670-675.
"Living Beyond Watergate: Was It Really Duress?" Episcopalian,138(July,1973),15.
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"Medicine and Criteria for Human Nature," Science Medicine and Man (Oxford), I (September,1973),93-102.
"The Control of Death," Intellectual Digest,4(October,1973),82-83.
"New Definitions of Death: The Richmond Brain Case," Prism,2(January,1974),13-14,16.
"Medicine, Morals and Religion," Theology Today,31(April,1974),39-46.
"To Live and to Die," Humanist,34(July-August,1974),12-16.
"Abortion and the True Believer," Christian Century,91(November 27,1974),1126-1127.
"Four Indicators of Humanhood: The Enquiry Matures," Hastings Center Report,4(December,1974),4-7.
"Situation Ethics and Watergate," Theology Today,31(January,1975),343-345.
"Being Happy Being Human," Humanist,35(January-February,1975),13-15.
"Situation Ethics, Law, and Watergate," Cumberland Law Review,6 (Spring, 1975), 35-60.
"Dead of Alive: A Definition," Cross Talk, 4 (June, 1975), no pp.
"Fetal Research: Pragmatists and Doctrinaires," Hastings Center Report,5(June,1975),11-46.
"On the Hartford Declaration," Theology Today,32(July,1975),185-186.
"Who Has First Claim on Health Funds?" Hastings Center Report,5(August,1975),13-15.
"William Howard Melish:40th Anniversary of His Ordination," Churchman,189(August-September,1975),12-13.
"Feeding the Hungry: An Ethical Appraisal," Soundings,59(Spring,1976),52-69.
MONOGRAPHS
The Church and Industrial Relations: A Preliminary Report, National Council, Episcopal Church, New York,1928,31pp.
What is Christian Sociology?, Problem Papers Series (No.1), Order of the Holy Cross, West Park, N.Y.,1933,32pp.
Money Makers and Moral Man, New Tracts for New Times (No.9), Morehouse Publishing Company, New York,1934,14pp.
Bibliography on the Church and Industry (with Spencer Miller), National Council, Episcopal Church, New York,1934,17pp.
The Church and Social Credit, Facing1934Series (No.4), ed. C. Rankin Barnes, National Council, Episcopal Church, New York,1934,8pp.
Christian Doctrine and Social Action, Church League for Industrial Democracy, New York,1935,18pp.
The Church and Its Community, Church in Urban America Series (No.4), National Council, Episcopal Church,1939,23pp.
The Meaning of the Malvern Declaration, Church League for Industrial Democracy, New York,1941, 11pp.
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Life and Worship: Malvern Movement, Church League for Industrial Democracy, New York,1941,2pp.
Christian Peace Aims: A Harmony of Recent Pronouncements, Foreward Movement, Cincinnati,1942,24pp.
The Ministry and the Laity, Alumni Association, Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge,1945,17pp.
Pastoral Counseling: A Bibliography, General Theological Library, Boston,1948,12pp.
Arise and Stand Upon Thy Feet, Christ Church Cathedral, Springfield, Massachusetts,1948,6pp.
Christianity and Civilization: A Bibliography, General Theological Library, Boston,1948,12pp.
Christ's Feast or the Devil's?, Episcopal League for Social Action, New York,1949,4pp.
Father Huntington: Christian Social Pioneer, Pioneer Builders for Christ Series, Seabury Press, New York,1958,21pp.
The New Look in Christian Ethics, Harvard Divinity School Alumni, Cambridge, Massachusetts,1959,18pp.
A Statement on Business Ethics (with others), U. S. Department of Commerce, Washington, D.C.,1961,13pp.
The Christian Approach to Nuclear War (with others), Church Peace Mission, Washington, D.C.,1962,12pp.
Mission to Main Street, Seabury Press, New York,1962,40pp.
The Greatest Good of the Greatest Number (Sanger Lecture), Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia,1971,16pp.
Matters of Life and Death, Young Lawyers' Section, Virginia Bar Association (Docket, Suppl. February), Richmond,1972,14pp.
On the Frontier, Thesis Theological Cassettes, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,1972,1hour.
Humanness and Abortion, ASA Reprints, Association for the Study of Abortion, New York,1974,4pp.
Fetal Research: An Ethical Appraisal, National Commission for Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research, No.(os)76-128, Washington, D.C.,1975,22pp.
PREFACES
"Foreword," Shin Ohara, Situation Ethics in Prospect (trans'd) (Tokyo: Chuokoron-sha,1971),3-6.
"Preface," Is Gay Good?: A Symposium on Homosexuality, Theologyand Ethics, ed. W. D. Oberholtzer (Philadelphia: Westminster Press,1971),5-10.
"Introduction," Frontiers in Medicine, ed. C. A. Frazier (Springfield: C. C. Thomas,1974), i-iv.
"Foreword," Marvin Kohl, The Morality of Killing (London: Peter Owen,1974), ix-x.
"Introduction," Lael Wertenbaker, Death of a Man (Boston: Beacon Press,1974), v-xii.
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421 - Bibliography of Joseph Fletcher |
"Foreword," Is it Right to Modify Man?, ed. C. A. Frazier (Springfield: C. C. Thomas,1975), iii-vii,
"Preface," Howard Brody, Ethical Decisions in Medicine (Boston: Little, Brown and Company,1976), v.
ANTHOLOGIES
"The Patient's Right to Die," College Reading and Writing, ed. W. Johnson and T. M. Davis (Chicago: Scott, Foresman and Company,1966),420-428.
"The Fletcher-McCabe Debate," Contemporary Religious Experience, ed, E. B. Fiske (New York: Bobbs-Merrill,1967),28-40.
"Euthanasia: Our Right to Die," Readings in Biological Science, ed. I. W. Knobloch (New York: Appleton, Century. Crofts,1967),425-426,
"The Patient's Right to Die," The Enquiring Reader, ed. I. Sullivan, E. Koras, and R. Fabrizio (Boston: D. C. Heath and Company,1967),95-103.
"Three Approaches to Social Morality," Contemporary Religious Issues, ed, D. E. Hartsock (Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing Company,1968),247-255.
"Various Readings," Dimensions of Decision, ed. N. J. Wert (Nashville: Methodist Publishing House,1968), No.80,86,98,113,119,122.
"Our Shameful Waste of Human Tissues," Updating Life and Death, ed. D. A. Cutter (Boston: Beacon Press,1969),1-30.
"The Patient's Right to Die," Success in College, ed. M. H. and E. S. Norman (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,1971),102-109.
"Love is the Only Measure,' The Language of Argument,ed.D.MacDonald (Toronto: Chandler Publishing Company,1971),68-79.
"Ethics and Unmarried Sex," Moral Issues and Christian Response,ed. P. T. Jersild and D. A. Johnson (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,1971),108-117.
"Six Propositions," Ethics in Perspective and Practice, ed. W. K. Sites and B. C. Blossom (New York: Oceana Publications,1972),41-44.
"Voluntary Euthanasia, The New Shape of Death," Experimentation with Human Beings, ed. J. Katz (New York: Russell Sage Foundation,1972),716-717.
"Ethics in Logic and Values," Right and Reason, ed. A. J. Fagothy, S.J. (St. Louis: C. V. Mosby Company,1972),111-124.
"Morals and Unmarried Sex," Perspectives on Human Sexuality, ed. J.L, Malfetti and E. M. Eidlitz (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,1972),71-79.
"The Relativity of Moral Judgment," Introduction to Philosophy, ed. P. E. Davis (New York: Charles E. Merrill Publishing Company,1973),66-75,
"Situation Ethics," Philosophy for a New Generation, ed. A. K.
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Bierman and J. A. Gould (New York: Macmillan Company,1973),11-29.
"Circumstances and Moral Certainty," Range of Philosophy, ed. H.H. Titus, M. H. Hepp, and M. S. Smith (New York: D. Van Nostrand,1973),73-82.
"Love and Do What is Right," Exploring Religious Meaning, ed. R. C. Monk (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,1974),108-119.
"Euthanasia: The Right to Die," Ethical Issues, ed. W. R. Durland and W. H. Bruening (Palo Alto: Mayfield Publishing Company,1975),220-246.
"Genetic Engineering," Life and Death: Who Controls?, ed. N. C. and J. M. Ostheimer (New York: Springer Verlag,1976),96-110.
"Euthanasia: The Ethical and the Pre-ethical," Death: Known and Unknown, ed. J. Corse and A. Dallery (New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich,1976),176-183.
"The Patient's Right to Die," Content and Structure: Readings for College Writers, ed. H. Willis (New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich,1976),163-172.
"Euthanasia: Our Right to Die," Personal Philosophy, ed. B. F. Potter (New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich,1976),85-102.