He wrote several books on morality and ethics that draw on the American philosophical tradition of pragmatism, in particular the ethical theory of John Dewey.[3] His works include Norms and Practices (2008),[4]Ethical Norms, Particular Cases (1996),[5]Moral Relevance and Moral Conflict (1988),[6]Virtues and Vices (1978),[7] and numerous articles.[8]
^According to Jennifer Welchman, of University of Alberta, in a cover blurb:"Norms and Practices". www.cornellpress.cornell.edu. Archived from the original on 2010-06-18. I have always been an admirer of James D. Wallace's work. His clear accessible prose style is a pleasure to read. And he has long argued forcefully and well that moral philosophers still have much to learn from the pragmatist tradition, in particular from the moral philosophy of John Dewey. In Norms and Practices he shows where and how leading ideas of Deweyan pragmatism interrelate with contemporary debates about the structure and function of ordinary practical reasoning, the role of rules and generalization in moral evaluation, and their relation to virtues and vices of moral character and conduct.