Ethics and Social JusticeHailed by philosopher Sidney Hook as "a landmark in the history of American philosophy," the International Philosophy Year in 1967-68 brought seventy of the Western world's most distinguished philosophers to the State University College at Brockport for a series of fourteen conferences devoted to different areas of philosophic inquiry. Contemporary Philosophic Thought, which records the original papers of these conferences in four volumes, stands not only as a major contribution to philosophy, but also as a wide survey of the range of conceptual problems that philosophers are working to solve. Vol. 1, Language, Belief, and Metaphysics, is addressed to problems of logic and language. Contributors discuss the nature of belief and present theories on the concept of the world and on identity through time. Vol. 2, Mind, Science, and History, focuses on the mind and related issues. Scientists and historians join philosophers in considering problems that bear upon their disciplines. Vol. 3, Perspectives in Education, Religion, and the Arts, discusses philosophy as related to cultural change, the changing aims of education, and religion. The philosophy of art is explored from varying viewpoints of genre, style, poetics, aesthetics, rhetoric, and communication. Vol. 4, Ethics and Social Justice, takes up moral and legal issues with essays on human rights and on philosophy as applied to practice. |
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Cuprins
Philosophy of Practice | 1 |
A Plea for Socrates Heritage A Response | 16 |
First Steps in the Theory of Practice | 21 |
The Philosophy of Practice and Some Practices of Philosophers A Response | 45 |
Doubts About Justice | 52 |
In Defense of Justice A Response | 75 |
The Spirit of Philosophy and the Practice of Politics | 85 |
Value and Fact | 93 |
Kelsens Doctrine of the Unity of Law | 171 |
Comments on the Unity of Law Doctrine A Response | 200 |
Civil Disobedience and the PoliticalQuestion Doctrine | 207 |
A Theory of Civil Disobedience | 225 |
Philosophy Law and Civil Disobedience | 240 |
Reflections on Human Rights | 252 |
Sociology and the Philosophy of Human Rights | 282 |
Philosophy and History in the Development of Human Rights | 300 |
The Bounds of Morality | 122 |
Universalizability and Justice | 142 |
Interests Role Reversal Universalizability and the Principle of Mutual Acknowledgement A Response | 164 |
Is the Declaration of Human Rights a Western Concept? | 323 |
Notes on Contributors | 333 |
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Contemporary Philosophic Thought: The International Philosophy ..., Volumul 4 Howard Evans Kiefer,Milton Karl Munitz Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 1968 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
accept according action answer apply argue argument basic become believe civil claim common concept concerned consider considerations constitutional conventions course Court decide decision demand depend determine discussion distribution doctrine economic effect equal established example expression fact follow formulated freedom give given ground hold human rights idea ideal important individual interests international law interpretation involved issues judge judgments justice justified Kelsen kind least less lives logical matter means ment moral nature necessary norms object particular perhaps person philosophy political position possible practice present principle problems Professor question reason recognized relation relationship relevant respect responsibility rules seems sense situation social society statements tastes theoretical theory things thought tion treat treatment true United universal universalizability valid value judgments
Referințe la această carte
Social Rights Under the Constitution: Government and the Decent Life Cécile Fabre Previzualizare limitată - 2000 |
Giving Desert Its Due: Social Justice and Legal Theory Wojciech Sadurski Previzualizare limitată - 1985 |