Darryl Wright has an article in Social Philosophy And Policy on objectivity in ethics which I thought was particularly good. It doesn't really solve the conundrum that's recently been a hot topic among Objectivists about the obligation (or lack thereof) to choose life as one's standard of value, but Wright's explanation of objectivity itself is one of the clearest and best written I've ever seen. It's so nice to see good, solid, non-haranguing Objectivist scholarship!
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