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Hampden-Turner, Radical Man (New York, 1971) contains a hotchpotch
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of surveys and research linking certain humanistic values with
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an outlook on life that is subjectively rewarding; but the data are often
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only tangentially relevant to the conclusions drawn from them.
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On psychopaths, see H. Cleckley, The Mask of Sanity, 5th ed. (St.
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Louis, 1976). The remark about requests for help coming from relatives,
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not the psychopaths themselves, is on p. viii. The quotation from a
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378
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Notes and References
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happy psychopath is from W. and J. McCord, Psychopathy and Delinquency
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(New York, 1956), p. 6. On the ability of psychopaths to avoid
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prison, see R. D. Hare, Psychopathy (New York, 1970), pp. 111-12.
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The 'paradox of hedonism' is discussed by F. H. Bradley in the third
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essay of his Ethical Studies; for a psychotherapist's account. see V.
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Frankl. The Will to Meaning (London, 1971), pp. 33-4.
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On the relation between self-interest and ethics, see the concluding
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chapter of Sidgwick's Methods of Ethics; and for a useful anthology, D.
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Gauthier (ed.), Morality and Rational Self-Interest (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.,
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1970). On the more general issue of the nature of practical reasoning,
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see J. Raz (ed.), Practical Reasoning (Oxford, 1978).
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The quotation from Dennis Levine is from his Inside Out (New York,
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1991), p. 391.
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