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  1. Joseph Whiteside Boyle DSO (6 November 1867 – 14 April 1923), better known as Klondike Joe Boyle, was a Canadian adventurer who became a businessman and entrepreneur in the United Kingdom. [1] In the First World War he came to see service assisting the allied Kingdom of Romania.

  2. Joseph M. Boyle Jr. was, with Germain Grisez and John Finnis, one of the principal architects of the so-called “New” Natural Law, or “New Classical” Natural Law Theory (NCNLT), arguably the most important development in Catholic moral philosophy of the twentieth century.

  3. Control of inflammation by re-instructing macrophages Joseph Boyle is a Clinical Reader in Molecular Vascular Pathology in the National Heart and Lung Institute. Dr Boyle’s research focus is in understanding the gene regulation of macrophages in order to re-instruct them from being por-inflammatory to pro-resolution.

  4. Joseph Boyle - 1997 - Ethics and International Affairs 11:83–98. Joseph Boyle discusses deontology, which derives precepts from moral principles, particularly making a case with reference to Alan Donagan's The Theory of Morality, which appeared the same year as Just and Unjust Wars.

  5. In subsequent decades Grisez, John Finnis, Joseph Boyle and others richly developed the theory and applied it to other issues (free choice, moral absolutes, abortion, euthanasia, marriage and others).

  6. Joseph Boyle is a Catholic philosopher who collaborated with Germain Grisez on The Way of the Lord Jesus, a systematic presentation of Christian moral principles. He also wrote on free choice, intention, euthanasia, and sexual ethics.

  7. Oct 22, 2010 · Among Boyle’s works, his essay, “Fairness in Holdings: A Natural Law Account of Property and Welfare Rights” (Boyle, 2001, 206–226), offers the most detailed natural-law analysis of the relations between property and welfare rights.