Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Bruce Waller" in English language version.
... While it is right to encourage people to not be lazy ... morally wrong to blame a person for their laziness ... Bruce Waller makes similar observations ...
March, 2015. Volume 3, Issue 1 ... To use an example of Bruce Waller's—if I borrow a large sum of money from a friend, and then hit financial hardship and am unable to repay the loan, it is not as if I am suddenly relieved of my moral obligation to repay. ... ... So let's grant for the sake of argument that incompatibilists like Waller and Pereboom and Kane are right ...
Vol. 34, No. 3 (Jul., 1997), pp. 357-366 ... Bruce Waller (1990) makes a similar case that determinism destroys our moral responsibility ...
(Volume 20, Issue 5) ... In this book Bruce Waller sets out to explain why the belief in moral responsibility is stronger than the arguments for it permit. From Waller's own point of view the practice of praising and blaming is fundamentally unfair ...
... Bruce Waller has written an important and interesting book ... moral responsibility is widespread ... deeply entrenched in our institutions and practices, it is theoretically and pragmatically indefensible ...[dead link ]
... Bruce Waller, a philosophy professor at Youngstown State University. In his new book, Restorative Free Will, he writes that we should focus on our ability, in any given setting, to generate a wide range of options for ourselves, and to decide among them without external constraint ...
... 5/2 (2010): 199–212, 10.1111/j.1747-9991.2009.00273 (see page 204:) ... argues that acceptance of determinism would deeply undermine our sense of moral worth and might even lead to an 'unprincipled nihilism'. On the optimistic end of the spectrum, Waller (1990) ... argue that it would have few negative effects and would have the positive effect of making us less retributive. ...
March, 2015. Volume 3, Issue 1 ... To use an example of Bruce Waller's—if I borrow a large sum of money from a friend, and then hit financial hardship and am unable to repay the loan, it is not as if I am suddenly relieved of my moral obligation to repay. ... ... So let's grant for the sake of argument that incompatibilists like Waller and Pereboom and Kane are right ...