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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Harry van der Linden
Editor's Introduction
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Trevor Smith
Punk Rock and Discourse Ethics:
924 Gilman Meets Alison Jaggar
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Alison Jaggar, in her treatment of feminist discourse ethics, expresses worries about using “idealized and imaginary communities” as elucidatory tools for discursive ethics. In response, this paper presents the history of 924 Gilman (an all-ages punk rock collective in the San Francisco Bay area) as a case study of a non-imagined and real discursive community. While the example of 924 Gilman, with its overtly feminist agenda and democratic ethos, bolsters Jaggar’s claims about the need for “closed communities” within discourse ethics, it also challenges some of her basic assumptions and raises important pragmatic and theoretical criticisms against discourse ethics.
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discussion: liberalism and radicalism |
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Charles W. Mills
Occupy Liberalism!:
Or Ten Reasons Why Liberalism Cannot Be Retrieved for Radicalism (And Why They're All Wrong)
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The “Occupy Wall Street!” movement has stimulated a long listing of other candidates for radical “occupation.” In this paper, I suggest the occupation of liberalism itself. I argue for a constructive engagement of radicals with liberalism in order to retrieve it for a radical egalitarian agenda. My premise is that the foundational values of liberalism have a radical potential that has not historically been realized, given the way the dominant varieties of liberalism have developed. Ten reasons standardly given as to why such a retrieval cannot be carried out are examined and shown to be fallacious.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
15 >
Issue: 2
Nancy Holmstrom
Response to Charles Mills's "Occupy Liberalism!"
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5.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Richard Schmitt
Comment on Charles Mills, "Occupy Liberalism!"
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6.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
15 >
Issue: 2
Charles W. Mills
Reply to Nancy Holmstrom and Richard Schmitt
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symposium: the ethics and mores of race |
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Chad Kautzer
Symposium:
The Ethics and Mores of Race
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8.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Kristie Dotson
Agreeing to Disagree, Perhaps? A Commentary on Naomi Zack, "The Ethics and Mores of Race"
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9.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Lewis Gordon
On Naomi Zack's "The Ethics and Mores of Race"
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10.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
15 >
Issue: 2
José Jorge Mendoza
Immigration:
The Missing Requirement for an Ethics of Race
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11.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
Lucius T. Outlaw, Jr.
Commentary on Naomi Zack's "The Ethics and Mores of Race"
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12.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
15 >
Issue: 2
Naomi Zack
About the Ethics and Mores of Race:
A Reply to My Critics
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book reviews |
13.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Anatole Anton
Feminism(s) Meets Capitalism
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14.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
Juanita Darling
Mediating the Revolution
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15.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
15 >
Issue: 2
Milton Fisk
The Marxist Tradition of Ethics from Below
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16.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
Amos Nascimento
Putting Kant's Geography on the Map
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17.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
Jose-Antonio Orosco
No More Fight Left in the Fields
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18.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Richard T. Peterson
Thinking about Violence in a Violent World
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19.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
Jorge Mario Rodriguez-Martinez
Human Rights Discourse and the Limitations of Transitional Justice
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20.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
15 >
Issue: 2
Contributors
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