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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2009
In this paper I propose to show how certain parts of Emil Brunner's ethical theory are related to one another and to answer some possible criticisms of these portions of his theory. In particular I wish to examine what Brunner has to say about how moral decisions ought to be made. Because of the nature of my topic I shall refer mainly to Brunner's The Divine Imperative (tr. Olive Wyon, Westminster Press, Philadelphia, 1947).