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8From Theonomy to Autonomy (review)Philosophical Books 40 (3): 159-169. 2002.Book reviewed in this article: J.B. Schneewind, The Invention of Autonomy: A History of Modern Moral Philosophy.
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10Vägledning till HägerströmstudietKungliga Humanistiska Veteneskaps-Samfundet i Uppsala. 1994.The work, (125 pp.), is a guide to the study of Hägerström's writings. It contains inter alia a list of the manuscripts of his which are held in the Uppsala University Library, a list of typescript copies posthumously produced of many of these, a list of lectures, seminars, talks and letters Also included is a bibliography of his publications. A few emendations and additions have been entered in the copy of this guide which is held in Speialläsesalen in the Uppsala University Library.
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77Some Myth about RealismRatio Juris 23 (3): 411-427. 2010.This paper discusses the place of philosophical naturalism in the philosophy of law, with special reference to Scandinavian Realism. Hägerström originated a non-cognitivist analysis of certain fundamental legal concepts, but he also proposed an error theory. The two approaches are incompatible, but were not always clearly distinguished. Among his followers, Olivecrona and Ross gradually abandoned the latter, at least from the late 1940s. Many accounts of their views are unclear, because the pres…Read more
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From Virtues To Duties:the Case Of Antoine Le GrandJahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik 8. 2000.Le Grand's introduction to philosophy, written for use in Cambridge, was the first to be written along Cartesian lines. A section on moral philosophy, first included in the second edition 1672, drew on the common Aristotelian-style way of dealing with the subject-matter, but with modifications inspired by Descartes. In the third edition 1675 this section was almost doubled in size. The additional chapters are an unacknowledged paraphrase of the bulk of Pufendorf's De officio hominis et civis 167…Read more
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61Two dualismsJournal of Value Inquiry 29 (2): 181-185. 1995.A discussion of a view proposed by Anthony Kenny, that inferences from factual statements to evaluative or normative statements, are in fact as unproblematic as the commonly accepted inferences inferences in the reverse direction,i. i. i from evaluative or normative statements to factual ones, The paper draws attention to some difficulties inherent in Kenny's view.
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1Robert Goodin: "Protecting the Vulnerable: a reanalysis of our social responsibilities" (review)Journal of Applied Philosophy 5 (1): 114. 1988.
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94Not a likely storyBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 11 (2). 2003.This Article does not have an abstract
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Heideggers tackofferFilosofisk Tidskrift 27 (4): 3-7. 2006.A discussion of Heidegger's view that it may be dulce et decorum gratefully to sacrifice one's life for the sake of Being. (A longer version is published in in Philosophia 2010.)
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Darwall, S.-The British Moralists and the Internal'Ought': 1640 1740Philosophical Books 38 102-103. 1997.
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98War and peaceBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 15 (2). 2007.This Article does not have an abstract
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59Review of: Samuel Pufendorf discepolo di Hobbes (review)Philosophical Books 37 (3): 171-174. 1996.
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LASZLO, Ervin and WILBUR, James B. : Human Values and Natural Science (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 49 (n/a): 322. 1971.
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46Reviews (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 43 (2): 232-271. 1965.The book reviewed is contains Hägerström's account of his own philosophical outlook and some of his writings on religion, translated into English by Robert T. Sandin, together with a biographical sketch by C.D. Broad.
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BAMBROUGH, R., "Moral Scepticism and Moral Knowledge" (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 59 (n/a): 356. 1981.
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ROSSVAER, V., "Kant's Moral Theory" (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 59 (n/a): 258. 1981.
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102Natural law and natural rightsIn Peter R. Anstey (ed.), The Oxford handbook of British philosophy in the seventeenth century, Oxford University Press. pp. 472. 2013.This chapter, which analyzes the conception of natural laws and natural rights in Great Britain during the seventeenth century, suggests that the widely held belief that rights depend for their existence on being granted by law is not true, and that the opposite is arguably closer to the truth. It also explores the writings on politics and religion during this period that mentioned natural laws and rights.
Acton, Australian Capital Territory, Australia