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62Law students are usually told that the purpose of damages is to make it as if a wrong had never happened.3 Although torts professors are good at explaining this idea to their students, it is the source of much academic perplexity. Money cannot really make serious losses go away, and it seems a cruel joke to say that money can make an injured person “whole.” Worse still, if money could make an injured person whole, injuring someone and then paying them seems just as good as not injuring them at a…Read more
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218Law and disagreementPhilosophical Review 110 (4): 611-614. 2001.Author Jeremy Waldron has thoroughly revised thirteen of his most recent essays in order to offer a comprehensive critique of the idea of the judicial review of legislation. He argues that a belief in rights is not the same as a commitment to a Bill of Rights. This book presents legislation by a representative assembly as a form of law making which is especially apt for a society whose members disagree with one another about fundamental issues of principle
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602. The Innate Right of HumanityIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 30-56. 2009.
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96Law and Morality: Readings in Legal PhilosophyUniversity of Toronto Press. 2001.Filling a long-standing need for a Canadian textbook in the philosophy of law, this anthology includes articles, readings, and cases in legal philosophy to give students the conceptual tools necessary to consider the general problems of jurisprudence.
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55In one of the few widely discussed passages in the Doctrine of Right, Kant makes the surprising claim that a shipwrecked sailor who dislodges another from a plank that will support only one of them is "culpable, but not punishable." Many commentators regard this passage as a sort of smoking gun that shows that, in extremis, Kant resorts to the very sort of empirical and consequentialist reasoning that he claims to do without.2 My aim in this paper is to defend his analysis, by showing both that …Read more
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436Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophyHarvard University Press. 2009.In this masterful work, both an illumination of Kant's thought and an important contribution to contemporary legal and political theory, Arthur Ripstein gives a comprehensive yet accessible account of Kant's political philosophy. In addition to providing a clear and coherent statement of the most misunderstood of Kant's ideas, Ripstein also shows that Kant's views remain conceptually powerful and morally appealing today.
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437. Public Right I: Giving Laws to OurselvesIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 182-231. 2009.
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139Critical noticeCanadian Journal of Philosophy 40 (4): 669-699. 2010.The 2008 meltdown in global capital markets has led to a renewed interest in questions of economic distribution. Many people suggest that the motives, incentive structures, and institutions in place were inadequate and, for the first time in a generation, public debate is animated by arguments about the need for greater equality. G.A. Cohen's new book resonates with many of the themes of these debates; he advocates a more thoroughgoing equality, even more thoroughgoing than that demanded by John…Read more
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Moral, Social, and Political Philosophy Phl 277yCustom Publishing Service, University of Toronto Bookstores. 1999.
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91Just War, Regular War, and Perpetual PeaceKant Studien 107 (1): 179-195. 2016.Name der Zeitschrift: Kant-Studien Jahrgang: 107 Heft: 1 Seiten: 179-195.
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87In A Theory of Justice, Rawls makes almost no mention of the issues of justice that animated philosophers in earlier centuries. There is no discussion of justice between persons, issues that Aristotle sought to explain under the idea of “corrective justice.” Nor is there discussion, except in passing, of punishment, another primary focus of the social contract approaches of Locke, Rousseau and Kant.1 My aim in this article is to argue that implicit in Rawls’s writing is a powerful and persuasive…Read more
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5211. Public Right V: Revolution and the Right of Human Beings as SuchIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 325-354. 2009.
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483. Private Right I: Acquired RightsIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 57-85. 2009.
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99Justice and ResponsibilityCanadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 17 (2): 361-386. 2004.I argue that institutions charged with giving justice must understand responsibility in terms of norms governing what people are entitled to expect of each other. On this conception, the sort of responsibility that is of interest to private law or distributive justice is not a relation between a person and the consequence, but rather a relation between persons with respect to consequences. As a result, nonrelational facts about a person’s actions and the circumstances in which she performs them …Read more
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1Richard W. Miller, Moral Differences: Truth, Justice and Conscience in a World of Conflict Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 13 (3): 111-113. 1993.
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117Form and Matter in Kantian Political Philosophy: A ReplyEuropean Journal of Philosophy 20 (3): 487-496. 2012.This paper responds briefly to four reviews of Force and Freedom. Valentini and Sangiovanni criticize what they see as the excessive formalism of the Kantian enterprise, contending that the Kantian project is circular, because it defines rights and freedom together, and that this circularity renders it unable to say anything determinate about appropriate restrictions and permissions. I show that the appearance of circularity arises from a misconstrual of the Kantian idea of a right. Properly und…Read more
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21Rationality and AlienationCanadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 15 (n/a): 449-466. 1989.Two decades ago, problems of alienation and fetishism were the focus of most English speaking studies of Marx’s philosophy. More recent work on Marx and Marxist themes has tended to avoid these questions in favor of discussions of explanation, exploitation, distributive justice and problems of class formation and co-ordination. The latter set of problems seem more readily addressable, if not always more tractable, using contemporary tools drawn from the philosophy of science, as well as methods …Read more
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708. Public Right II: Roads to FreedomIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 232-266. 2009.
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276Critical notice too much invested to quitEconomics and Philosophy 20 (1): 185-208. 2004.Faculty of Law and Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto 1. INTRODUCTION The economic analysis of law has gone through a remarkable change in the past decade and a half. The founding articles of the discipline – such classic pieces as Ronald Coase’s “The problem of social cost” (1960), Richard Posner’s “A theory of negligence” (1972) and Guido Calabresi and Douglas Malamed’s “Property rules, liability rules, and inalienability: One view of the cathedral” (1972) – offered economic analy…Read more