Justice and Judgement: The Rise and the Prospect of the Judgement Model in Contemporary Political PhilosophySAGE Publications, 1999 M09 13 - 272 páginas Justice and Judgement is a comprehensive introduction to theories of judgement in contemporary political and moral philosophy. The book offers a critical examination of judgement in the recent works of Rawls, Habermas, Ackerman, Michelman and Dworkin, including an historical overview of the judgement model in contemporary political philosophy; the function of the constitution; and deliberative democracy. The book concludes with a discussion of universalism and contemporary liberalism and the judgement view of justice. |
Dentro del libro
Página 242
... Shaping the Eighteenth Amendment : Temperance , Reform , Legal Culture and the Polity ( 1880-1920 ) . Durham , NC : University of North Carolina Press . Herzog , Don ( 1994 ) ' Democratic Credentials ' , Ethics , 104 : 467–79 . Höffe ...
... Shaping the Eighteenth Amendment : Temperance , Reform , Legal Culture and the Polity ( 1880-1920 ) . Durham , NC : University of North Carolina Press . Herzog , Don ( 1994 ) ' Democratic Credentials ' , Ethics , 104 : 467–79 . Höffe ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
The Rise of the Judgment Model in Contemporary | 13 |
Democracy Justice and Discourse | 37 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Justice and Judgement: The Rise and the Prospect of the Judgement Model in ... Alessandro Ferrara Sin vista previa disponible - 1999 |
Términos y frases comunes
acceptable according Ackerman aesthetic Amendment applied approach argument aspects assessment authors called Chapter citizens claim collective comprehensive conceived conception of justice concerning consensus considered consists constitutional context Court culture democracy democratic determinant developed discourse discussion distinction Dworkin equal respect ethical example exist fact fairness formal function given ground Habermas Habermas's hand higher human idea ideal identity important includes individual institutional interests interpretation intuitions issue judgment judgment view kind legitimacy legitimate liberal matter meaning Michelman moral namely nature normative validity notion object oriented parties person philosophy political position possible practical present principle problem procedure proposal question rational Rawls Rawls's reason reconstruction reflective reflective judgment relation remains Republicans requires rules sense social society specific stage standpoint statute theory tion turn understanding understood universalism view of justice