Books
These are
referred to simply by year and page number (e.g., “1972: 2”), except where
Williams published more than one book in the same year, in which case I have
used the abbreviations indicated.
1.
1972: Morality: An Introduction to Ethics,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
2.
PS: Problems of the Self, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1973.
3.
UFA: Utilitarianism: For and Against,
with J.J.C. Smart, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973.
4.
1978: Descartes: The Project of Pure Inquiry,
London: Pelican.
5.
1979: Report of the Committee on Obscenity
and Film Censorship (Chairman: Bernard Williams), Her Majesty's Stationery
Office, reprinted by Cambridge University Press.
6.
1981: Moral Luck, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
7.
1985: Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy,
London: Fontana.
8.
1993: Shame and Necessity, Berkeley:
University of California Press.
9.
MSH: Making Sense of Humanity, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1995.
10.
WME: World, Mind, and Ethics: Essays on the
ethical philosophy of Bernard Williams, J.E.J.Altham and Ross Harrison
(eds.), with “Replies” by Bernard Williams. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1995.
11.
1998: Plato, London: Phoenix.
12.
2002: Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in
Genealogy, Princeton: Princeton University Press.
13.
SP: The Sense of the Past: Essays on the
History of Philosophy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.
14.
IBD: In the Beginning was the Deed: Realism
and Moralism in Political Argument, Geoffrey Hawthorn (ed.), Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 2005.
15.
PHD: Philosophy as a Humanistic Discipline,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.
Collections
edited by Williams and others
1.
Bernard Williams and Alan Montefiore, eds., British
Analytic Philosophy, London: Routledge Kegan Paul, 1966.
2.
Bernard Williams and Amartya Sen, Utilitarianism
and Beyond, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.
Other
Papers by Bernard Williams (not in any of the collections)
1.
“Democracy and Ideology”, Political Quarterly,
32 (1961): 374–384.
2.
“Conversations with philosophers — Bernard
Williams talks to Bryan Magee about philosophy and morals”, The Listener,
February 4, 1971, pp. 136-140.
3.
“The moral view of politics”, The Listener,
June 3, 1976, 705-707. (“Nozick runs the risk of doing the same as many
Goldwaterites, of heading nostalgically for an Old West State of nature, but
doing it in a Cadillac”, p. 706.)
4.
“Dworkin on Community and Critical Interests”, California
Law Review, 77 (1989): 515–520.
5.
“Truth in Ethics,” Ratio, 8 (3) (1995):
227–42.
6.
“Ethics,” in Philosophy: A Guide Through the
Subject, A. C. Grayling (ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995,
545–582.
7.
“Contemporary Philosophy: A Second Look,” in The
Blackwell Companion to Philosophy, N. F. Bunnin (ed.), Oxford: Blackwell,
1996, 23–34.
8.
“History, Morality, and the Test of Reflection,”
in Christine Korsgaard, The Sources of Normativity, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1996, 210–218.
9.
“The Politics of Trust,” in The Geography of
Identity, Patricia Yaeger and Tobin Sayers (edd.), Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 1996, 368–381.
10.
“Toleration: An Impossible Virtue?” in Toleration:
An Elusive Virtue, David Heyd (ed.), Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1996, 18–27.
11.
“Reasons, Values and the Theory of Persuasion,”
in Ethics, Rationality and Economic Behavior, Francesco Farina, Frank
Hahn and Stafano Vannucci (eds.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996, 66–76.
12.
“Moral Responsibility and Political Freedom,” Cambridge
Law Journal, 56 (1997): 96–102.
13.
“Stoic Philosophy and the Emotions: Reply to
Richard Sorabji,” in Aristotle and After, R. Sorabji (ed.), Bulletin Inst.
Class Stud. London, Supplement 68 (1997).
14.
“Liberalism and Loss”, in The Legacy of
Isaiah Berlin, M. Lilla, R. Dworkin, and R. Silvers (eds.), New York: New
York Review of Books, 2001, 91–103.
15.
“Why Philosophy Needs History”, London Review
of Books, October 17, 2002, 7–9.
Interviews
with Williams
1.
Donald McDonald, “The uses of Philosophy”, The
Center Magazine, November/December 1983, pp. 40–49, available online.
2.
Stuart Jeffries, “The quest for truth”, The
Guardian, November 30, 2002, available online.
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