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188How Aristotelianism can become revolutionary : ethics, resistance, and utopiaIn Paul Blackledge & Kelvin Knight (eds.), Virtue and politics: Alasdair MacIntyre's revolutionary Aristotelianism, University of Notre Dame Press. pp. 3-7. 2011.
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1856Cohen, G. A. Why Not Socialism? Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2009 . Pp. 83. $14.95 (cloth)Ethics 120 (2): 391-395. 2010.
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22ForewordIn Adolf Reinach & John Crosby (eds.), The a Priori Foundations of the Civil Law [1913], De Gruyter. 2012.
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191Ends and EndingsAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (4): 807-821. 2014.The question posed in this paper is: Is there an end to some type of activity which is the end of any rational agent? It approaches an answer by a critical examination of one view of human beings that excludes this possibility, that advanced by Harry Frankfurt. It is argued that once we have distinguished, as Frankfurt does not, that which we have good reason to care about from that which we do not have good reason to care about, we are able to identify a conception of a final end for human acti…Read more
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252. Die Thesen über Feuerbach. Ein Weg, der nicht beschritten wurdeIn Harald Bluhm (ed.), Karl Marx / Friedrich Engels: Die deutsche Ideologie, Akademie Verlag. pp. 25-40. 2010.
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38Diskussion/Discussion. Kommentare zu R. Rorty: Zur Lage der Gegenwartsphilosophie in den USA (Analyse & Kritik 1/81)Analyse & Kritik 4 (1): 102-113. 1982.Richard Rorty argues that the present state of analytic philosophy is the result of the collapse of the logical empiricist program. But most of the characteristics of analytic philosophy which Rorty ascribes to that collapse predated logical empiricism. The historical explanation of the present state of philosophy must begin not later than with the schism between philosophy and the other disciplines in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. To begin then leads to a different view of how philo…Read more
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311Does Applied Ethics Rest on a Mistake?The Monist 67 (4): 498-513. 1984.‘Applied ethics’, as that expression is now used, is a single rubric for a large range of different theoretical and practical activities. Such rubrics function partly as a protective device both within the academic community and outside it; a name of this kind suggests not just a discipline, but a particular type of discipline. In the case of ‘applied ethics’ the suggestive power of the name derives from a particular conception of the relationship of ethics to what goes on under the rubric of ‘a…Read more
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96Colloquium 8: Yet Another Way to Read the Republic?Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 23 (1): 205-224. 2008.
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923Charles Taylor and dramatic narrative: Argument and genrePhilosophy and Social Criticism 44 (7): 761-763. 2018.
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81Closed Systems and Open Minds: The Limits of Naivety in Social AnthropologyPhilosophical Quarterly 17 (69): 371. 1967.
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212Critical Remarks on The Sources of the Self by Charles TaylorPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 54 (1): 187-190. 1994.
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1626Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity by Richard Rorty (review)Journal of Philosophy 87 (12): 708-711. 1990.
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7238. After Virtue: A Study in Moral TheoryIn Bernard Williams (ed.), Essays and Reviews: 1959-2002, Princeton University Press. pp. 184-186. 2014.
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343Alasdair Macintyre on education: In dialogue with Joseph DunneJournal of Philosophy of Education 36 (1). 2002.This discussion begins from the dilemma, posed in some earlier writing by Alasdair MacIntyre, that education is essential but also, in current economic and cultural conditions, impossible. The potential for resolving this dilemma through appeal to ‘practice’, ‘narrative unity’, and ‘tradition’(three core concepts in After Virtue and later writings) is then examined. The discussion also explores the relationship of education to the modern state and the power of a liberal education to create an ‘e…Read more
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97An Introduction to Metaphysics of Knowledge (review)American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 65 (1): 112-114. 1991.