E-Collection
LOGIN
PRODUCTS
All Products
Online Resources
Journals & Series
Digital Media
Books & Reference Works
E-Collection
About
Alphabetically
By Category
By Type
Price Lists
Terms and Conditions
MEMBERSHIPS
Societies & Associations
Conference Registrations
SERVICES
Conference Exhibits
Conference Registrations
Electronic Publishing
Journal Advertising
Mailing Lists
Marketing Services
Membership Services
Production Typesetting
Subscription Fulfillment
ABOUT
About us
Contact
FAQs
Order Info
Privacy
Support
This Title
All Titles
Browse
>
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
>> Go to Current Issue
Canadian Journal of Philosophy
Volume 29, Issue 2, June 1999
Table of Contents
Already a subscriber? -
Login here
Not yet a subscriber? -
Subscribe here
Browse by:
Volume
Year
41
40
39
38
37
37 Supplement
36
35
34
34 Supplement
33
33 Supplement
32
32 Supplement
31
31 Supplement
30
30 Supplement
29
29 Supplement
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
20 Supplement
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
5
Issue: 4
Issue: 3
Issue: 2
Issue: 1
Issue: Supplement
Overview
Editorial Team
Special Issues
Indexing / Abstracting
Rights & Permissions
Results per page:
20
50
100
Sort by:
Page Number - ascending
Page Number - descending
Date - recent first
Date - oldest first
Title
Author
<< additional functions
Displaying: 1-11 of 11 documents
1.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Thomas Hurka
From the Editorial Board
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
2.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Ishtiyaque Haji
Moral Anchors and Control
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
3.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Patricia Blanchette
Relative Identity and Cardinality
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
4.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Mark LeBar
Kant on Welfare
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
5.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Susan Dimock
Defending Non-Tuism
abstract
|
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
Hobbes's central insight about ethics was that it should not be understood to require that we make ourselves a prey for others. It is this insight that both varieties of contractarianism [Hobbesian and Kantian] respect. Consider a relationship between two human beings that exists for reasons of either love or duty; let us also suppose that it is a relationship that can be instrumentally valuable to both parties. In order for that relationship to receive our full moral endorsement, we must ask whether either party uses the duty or the love connecting them in a way that affects the other party's ability to realize the instrumental value from that relationship. To be sure, good marriages and good friendships ought not to be centrally concerned with the question of justice, but they must also be, at the very least, relationships in which love or duty are not manipulated by either party in order to use the other party to her detriment.
critical notice
6.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Christine Sypnowich
Race, Culture, and the Egalitarian Conscience
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
7.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Eric Saidel
Being There
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
8.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Notes on Contributors/Sur les Collaborateurs
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
9.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Information for Authors/Avis aux Auteurs
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
10.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Subscription Information/Abonnements
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
11.
Canadian Journal of Philosophy:
Volume
>
29
>
Issue: 2
Other Business Information/Services administratifs---details supplementaires
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by