Books by Fellows

Ralph W. Tyler Collection

A permanent collection of more than 1,700 publications donated by former Fellows as gifts to the Center -- works that were conceived, initiated or completed during their Fellowship year and which acknowledge the Center in print. On average, some 25-30 books can be credited to each class over the 50 years the Center has been in existence.

New Tyler Books

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John Horty

Although the study of reasons plays an important role in both epistemology and moral philosophy, little attention has been devoted to the question of how, exactly, reasons interact to support the actions or conclusions they do. In this book, John F. Horty attempts to answer this question by providing a precise, concrete account of reasons and their interaction, based on the logic of default reasoning. The book begins with an intuitive, accessible introduction to default logic itself, and then argues that this logic can be adapted to serve as a foundation for a concrete theory of reasons. Horty then shows that the resulting theory helps to explain how the interplay among reasons can determine what we ought to do by developing two different deontic logics, capturing two different intuitions about moral conflicts.

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Tanya Marie Luhrmann

From the Author:

How does God become real for people? This book begins by pointing out that doubt is natural and inevitable, especially in a pluralistic, science-minded society.

Ten years ago I set out to understand how people maintain their faith despite their doubts by looking at a kind of Christianity that seems (to skeptics) to be most difficult to explain: renewalist evangelical Christianity.

Book Cover image of collective action
Bruce A. Bimber

From the publisher:

"Challenging the notion that digital media render traditional, formal organizations irrelevant, this book offers a new theory of collective action and organizing. Based on extensive surveys and interviews with members of three influential and distinctive organizations in the United States – The American Legion, AARP, and MoveOn – the authors reconceptualize collective action as a phenomenon in which technology enhances people's ability to cross boundaries in order to interact with one another and engage with organizations.

Recent Works by Fellows

A temporary collection on loan to the Center representing published work by the current Class of Fellows in residence.

General Collection

Classic and current behavioral science works as well as the latest ten years of books relevant to the behavioral sciences donated by former Fellows as gifts to the Center.

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