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Full Description
New Conversations in Philosophy, Law, and Politics offers a new agenda for work where these three disciplines meet. It showcases three generations of scholars--from newly minted professors to some of today's most distinguished thinkers. Consisting of fifteen conversations, pairs of chapters dedicated to a single topic, the volume provides intergenerational and multidisciplinary perspectives on aspects of our social world. Each conversation comprises a first paper by a scholar who sets the topic, followed by a second paper by a scholar of a different generation, and usually a different discipline, who offers further insight or commentary. Each conversation thus provides two sets of original thoughts about a matter of lively current interest and interdisciplinary significance. Topics investigated include moral revolutions, AI and democracy, trust and the rule of law, responsibility, praise and blame, reasonableness, duty, political obligation, justice and equality, justice and intersectionality, domination, pornography, intentions in the law, and legal argumentation. Written in clear prose, the volume is accessible by philosophers, lawyers, political theorists, and beyond.
Contents
1. Moral Revolutions
Kimberley Brownlee: On the Urgency of Kick-starting a Moral Revolution to Save Ourselves
Kwame Anthony Appiah: Making Change
2. AI and Democracy
Hélène Landemore: Can Artificial Intelligence Bring Deliberation to the Masses?
Philip Pettit: The Two Roles of Deliberation in Democracy
3. Trust and the Rule of Law
Thomas W. Simpson: Trust and the Rule of Law
Onora O'Neill: Cultures of Trust and the Rule of Law
4. Taking Responsibility
Pauline Sliwa: Taking Responsibility
Pamela Hieronymi: Taking Responsibility, Defensiveness, and the Blame Game
5. Praise
Zoë Johnson King: What Are We Praiseworthy For?
Susan Wolf: Understanding Praise
6. Blame
James Edwards: What Can We Say to Each Other?
Alison Hills: Standing to Blame: Can it Be Defended?
7. Reasonableness
Hasan Dindjer: The Reasonable and the Justified
Thomas Scanlon: Varieties of Reasonableness
8. Duty
Nicolas Cornell: Looking and Seeing
Jeremy Waldron: On Duty
9. Political Obligation
Ashwini Vasanthakumar: Pluralism in Political Obligation
Nancy L. Rosenblum: All Our Imperatives
10. Justice and Equality
Gina Schouten: Distributive Egalitarianism as Aspirational Justice
Samuel Scheffler: Relational Equality and Pluralism about Justice
11. Justice and Groups
Robin Dembroff: The Metaphysics of Injustice
Sally Haslanger: Social Systems and Intersectional Oppression
12. Domination
Lori Watson: On Domination
Catharine A. MacKinnon: Of Domination and its Ending
13. Pornography
Kate Greasley: Pornography and the Limits of Speech Act Analysis
Rae Langton: Pornography: 'Enacting' or 'Eroticising' Women s Subordination?
14. Law and Intentions
Brian Flanagan: Intentional Legislation: What Makes a Text a Statute?
Michael Bratman: Intentions, Procedures, and Social Rules
15. Argumentation
Luís Duarte d'Almeida: Arguing A Contrario
John Horty: A Contrario Argument and Default Reasoning