Cover of Essays in Philosophy
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Displaying: 1-20 of 34 documents


editor’s introduction
1. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
David Heise The Philosophy of Human Rights
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essays
2. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Eric Smaw From Chaos to Contractarianism: Hobbes, Pojman, and the Case for World Government
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In this paper, I argue that Louis Pojman fails to justify his conception of a moderate cosmopolitan world government. I illustrate this by highlighting the fact that Pojman fails to articulate adequate justifications for his Principle of Humanity (POH) and Principle of Equality (POE). This is problematic because the POH and POE ground his conception of human rights, which, in turn, grounds his conception of a moderate cosmopolitan world government. Hence, since he fails to justify the POH and the POE, I conclude that his conception of a cosmopolitan world government ultimately fails. But, before I launch this attack on Pojman, I offer substantial philosophical analyses of Hobbes's arguments for the state of nature, human rights, and the establishment of the commonwealth. I do so because Hobbes provides the philosophical basis for Pojman's philosophy of world government. I show that by understanding the philosophical problems inherent in Hobbes we gain better understanding of the philosophical problems at the basis of Pojman.
3. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Michael Payne Henry Shue on Basic Rights
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4. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Per Bauhn The End of Duty
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Justice is often viewed in terms of seeing to it that right-holders are provided with the goods that they are entitled to. Less attention is given to the other dimension of justice, namely, that of duty-holders. If persons are assigned more duties, or more burdensome duties, than fairness requires, then they are victims of injustice just as much as persons whose rights are left unfulfilled. In this essay, I will argue for certain limits to the duty to assist people in need. My argument does not intend to show that we have no positive duties, but rather that these duties, whether they are of an interpersonal or a global, institutional kind, should be guided by an idea of fairness that pertains to the relations between duty-holders as well as between them and right-holders. I will discuss structural differences between negative and positive duties, as well as formulate a Principle of Contributive Fairness.
book reviews
5. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
A. M. Ungar Review of Frege's Logic, by Danielle Macbeth
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6. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Dwayne A. Tunstall Review of We Who Are Dark: The Philosophical Foundations of Black Solidarity, by Tommie Shelby
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7. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Jim Stone Review of Mindsight, by Colin McGinn
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8. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Rohit Parikh Review of Epistemology, A Contemporary Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge, by Robert Audi
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9. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
John Schroeder Review of Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations: Critical Essays, by Meredith Williams
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10. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
John Scott Gray Review of Europe: A Nietzschean Perspective, by Stefan Elbe
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11. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Anca Gheaus Review of Moral Repair Reconstructing Moral Relations after Wrongdoing, by Margaret Urban Walker
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12. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Elmer H. Duncan Review of Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art, An Introduction, by Robert Stecker
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13. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
David Boersema Review of The Pursuit of Comparative Aesthetics: An Interface Between East and West, ed. Mazhar Hussain and Robert Wilkinson
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14. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 2
Christina M. Bellon Review of Inhuman Conditions: On Cosmopolitanism and Human Rights, by Pheng Cheah
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editor’s introduction
15. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Christine A. James Philosophy of Disability
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essays
16. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Julie Joy Clarke Doubly Monstrous?: Female and Disabled
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In this article I consider instances in visual culture in which artists and filmmakers aestheticize women with damaged, missing or anomalous limbs. I focus upon Joel Peter Witkin’s photomontage Las Meninas (1987), Peter Greenaway’s film “A Zed and Two Noughts” (1985), Alison Lapper Pregnant a statue by Marc Quinn, Mathew Barney’s film “Cremaster” (2002), David Cronenberg’s “Crash” (1996), Luis Buñuel’s “Tristana” (1970) and David Lynch’s short film “The Amputee” (1973). I argue that although the artists and filmmakers reveal, rather than disguise the damaged, anomalous or missing limb(s) of the women, thus valorising their particular embodiment, these women are paradoxically still portrayed as deviant and monstrous.
17. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Sophia Isako Wong Justice and Cognitive Disabilities: Specifying the Problem
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The question of how to treat people with cognitive disabilities (PCDs) poses an important problem for Rawlsian theories of justice because it is unclear whether PCDs are included within the scope of moral personhood. Rawls’s Standard Solution focuses on nondisabled adults as the fundamental case, while later addressing PCDs as marginal cases. I claim that the Standard Solution has two weaknesses. First, it relies on a dichotomy between nondisabled and disabled that is tenuous and difficult to defend. Second, it makes the theory circular in a vicious way.I argue that Rawls’s theory can be revised so that it solves the problem of how to treat PCDs while avoiding the two weaknesses of the Standard Solution. There are three constraints on any successfully revised Rawlsian theory: 1) it must be resourcist rather than welfarist; 2) it must provide some principled basis for limiting our obligations to PCDs; and 3) it must address the whole range of PCDs, including the most severely disabled individuals.
18. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
H-Dirksen Bauman Listening to Phonocentrism with Deaf Eyes: Derrida’s Mute Philosophy of (Sign) Language
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19. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Adam Cureton A Rawlsian Perspective on Justice for the Disabled
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I aim to identify and describe some basic elements of a Rawlsian approach that may help us to think conscientiously about how, from the standpoint of justice, we should treat the disabled. Rawls has been criticized for largely ignoring issues of this sort. These criticisms lose their appeal, I suggest, when we distinguish between a Rawlsian standpoint and the limited project Rawls mainly undertakes in A Theory of Justice. There his explicit aim is to find principles of justice, which are to govern the basic structures of a closed, well-ordered society that exists under reasonably favorable conditions, that would be chosen by parties in the original position from among a small set of traditional conceptions of justice. Once we develop a conception of justice for a society like that, Rawlsians hope we can make certain revisions to find principles of justice for a society like ours. Finally, I sketch what seems to me a plausible way for a Rawlsian to begin thinking about how a society like ours should provide justice for its disabled citizens.
20. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 9 > Issue: 1
Scott DeShong Ability, Disability, and the Question of Philosophy
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This essay treats the field of philosophy and the study of disability such that each may be conceived of in terms of the other, perhaps to the extent that they may be thought of as one. First, it examines the bases and methods of various documents in the study of disability, finding that such study may be conceived of as essentially philosophical, even as the philosophical nature of disability studies threatens such studies’ practice. Then philosophy is depicted as that discourse which necessarily interrogates its bases and methods -that is, as discourse that engages its own ability. The two fields are presented as exemplary of the interrogation of ability, particularly of discursive ability. The essay’s primary influence is Emmanuel Levinas, mainly for the emphasis he places on the nature of language in his approach to philosophical critique. Developing the notion of im/possibility -the simultaneous emergence of a discourse’s conditions of possibility with those of its impossibility -the essay focuses on “dis/ability” as the central notion in the convergence of philosophy and disability studies.