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Terence Rajivan Edward

University of Manchester
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University of Manchester
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2007
Homepage
Manchester, England, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics and Epistemology
Value Theory
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
Philosophy of Social Science
General Philosophy of Science
1 more
PhilPapers Editorships
Philosophy of Anthropology
  • All publications (982)
  •  388
    Not in the literature: an ideal political theory tutorial
    I present a fictional and somewhat unpleasant tutorial. In it a use of the term “ideal political theory” is connected with the reflective equilibrium method: an ideal theory requires no adaptation of specific moral judgments to fit with the theory. I have not been in a tutorial closely resembling this, I should say.
  •  578
    A sense of “ideal theory”
    I present a sense of the term “ideal theory” based on Joseph Raz’s response to the situation of a lifeguard faced with three drowning on one side and two on the other and unable to save all. From what is of value, such a theory builds up a conception of an ideal political state or an aspect of it which we have reason to realize, but ignoring whether it is possible for us to realize this.
    Political Realism and UtopianismPolitical Feasibility
  •  1076
    Mother-in-law visits in Flora Nwapa’s One is Enough
    This paper considers two explanations for why the main character of Flora Nwapa’s novel One is Enough does not answer the question of how many times her mother-in-law has visited. One of these is a variation on the surprise exam paradox.
  •  860
    Salvador Dali on the nature of genius, in contrast with Yukio Mishima
    This paper tries to capture Salvador Dali’s conception of a genius in his Diary of a Genius. The Japanese writer Mishima strikes me as of a comparable level, but if so it seems he either does not think of himself as a genius or he has a different conception of genius.
    History of Economics
  •  546
    Graphomania and the all-or-nothing problem
    When Milan Kundera introduces the concept of graphomania, he seems to register only two extremes: the person who writes for a few known people and the person who writes for a very large audience. Joe Horton’s all-or-nothing problem provides a way of making sense of this conceptualization of the situation, though in a way that breaks with Kundera’s emphasis on a writer’s craving for audience attention.
    Literature and Ethics
  •  694
    Are reflective equilibrium and the original position consistent? The historical bias problem
    In this paper, I present a problem for regarding the reflective equilibrium and original position methods as consistent. I do not prove that there is an inconsistency, but there is a puzzle of how the two methods can be made consistent. The concern about inconsistency is because the former method allows for a kind of historical bias, as noted by T.H. Irwin, whereas the latter method seeks to guard against historical bias.
    The Original PositionReflective Equilibrium
  •  497
    Excavating forgotten critics from minor fictions: the film Temptation (1946)
    I propose that the film Temptation, from 1946, presents us with a person, or type of person, who was once observed: she is very involved in evaluating the significance of highly specialist inquiries, in this case Egyptology, and evaluating borderline cases of literature, regarding which it is difficult to assess their long-term value. The film assists with addressing how The Golden Bough was actually received. An appendix proposes that the film is of interest to Derrideans.
    Continental Film Theory
  •  404
    Ritual and realism in Flora Nwapa’s Women are Different
    In Nwapa’s novel, Dora and Rose are both confronted with the rituals of Tunde, but engage with them in different ways. I attempt a somewhat pained contrast: Dora’s way is closer to that of the functionalist participant observer, whereas Rose’s way is closer to that of earlier armchair anthropologists who sought the origins of rituals. I also note a puzzle to do with literary realism.
  •  935
    Off the verandah? A puzzle from Malinowski and British social anthropology
    This one page handout presents a seemingly inconsistent triad from Malinowski, concerning the requirement to do intensive fieldwork, and solutions to it.
    Philosophy of Anthropology
  •  598
    What exactly is the paradox of keeping-while-giving?
    This paper attempts to provide a clearer formulation of the paradox presented by Annette B. Weiner, in terms of a requirement to keep certain objects within a social group and also a requirement to exchange them with another social group.
  •  483
    Good reasons for obscure writing?
    I identify two seemingly good reasons for obscure writing, one to do with avoiding plagiarism or near-plagiarism (which I have identified before), and the other to do with avoiding attracting readers who prefer accessible writing but nevertheless have no space for you in the structure of roles they envisage.
    Academic and Teaching Ethics
  •  454
    Chapter one’s dreams: the paradox of the specialist on specialization
    This brief paper presents a problem: the specialist on specialization must seek to know the value of specialization across different fields, but that would seem to make them non-specialized. I also propose solutions.
    History of EconomicsDreams
  •  593
    Chapter one of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations again: a pin factory assumption
    This paper argues that Adam Smith’s attempt to use the pin factory example to illustrate a general phenomenon – the value of the division of labour – seems to depend on an assumption. Put simply, the assumption is that the skills and knowledge involved in one task are not relevant to doing another task, or if they are relevant they would just be developed by specializing in the other task.
    The Nature of Analytic PhilosophyHistory of EconomicsAdam Smith
  •  517
    Dorothea’s Lockean impressions through the lens of Joseph Raz
    The natural interpretation is that Dorothea’s early impressions of Edward Casaubon, in terms of John Locke, are illusory. But I draw attention to Joseph Raz’s suggestion that it is the status of Locke which is mistaken, though I favour the natural interpretation.
    The Gettier ProblemLocke: Political Philosophy
  •  470
    Style: should Kripke have avoided “I” in his academic writing?
    This brief paper considers what to say about someone who responds to Saul Kripke’s writing by saying, “He uses ‘I’. That sounds subjective.” What to say about such an inference?! The main response I offer is that philosophy is partly about challenging, not encouraging, mistaken inferences.
    The Nature of Philosophy
  •  642
    Max Gluckman’s objections to Sir James Frazer
    This is a one page handout presenting objections from Gluckman's book Politics, Law, and Ritual in Tribal Society.
    Philosophy of Anthropology
  •  463
    Why write philosophy fast?
    This paper presents two reasons for writing philosophy fast: to succeed in certain competitions; and to realize new and better ideas.
    Philosophical Methods, Misc
  •  422
    Why was The Golden Bough so popular?
    I presume numerous readers would have reacted as later critics famously did: we lack the sources to pursue Frazer’s goal of explaining why there was this rite of succession. Consequently, I find the popularity of his book puzzling. I cast doubt on Marilyn Strathern’s explanation and offer a wild conjecture.
  •  567
    Another objection from Sidgwick to Rawls’s liberty principle, and a response
    There are other problems for John Rawls’s philosophy that can be extracted from Henry Sidgwick’s discussion of the priority of freedom, apart from the problem H.L.A. Hart focuses on. This paper considers one such problem – that it is an empirical issue whether a sane adult is better off more free, rather than something to be assumed – and presents one Rawlsian solution.
    Rawls on Distributive JusticeHenry SidgwickJohn Rawls
  •  389
    Conjectural computer science history: the Middlesborough problem, by R.K. Nar*y*n
    This paper presents folk impressions of the University of Manchester’s difficulties in becoming a great university, but by means of a fiction imitating a distinguished writer from the Indian subcontinent. The impressions concern past efforts and the difficulties they faced.
  •  618
    Hillo! Getting caught in your own net as a humiliation rite
    I present another explanation for why Cambodian hunters catch themselves in their own nets when they have caught nothing. It is a humiliation rite, based on the premise: if you have spent your whole day hunting and have not trapped anything with the net, then the net has trapped you. The explanation reveals one of the problems with trying to work out why other people do things by placing yourself in their position: contradictory explanations.
  •  1031
    The Hart-Rawls debate: libel, privacy infringement, reflective equilibrium
    H.L.A. Hart objects to John Rawls’s liberty principle by drawing attention to how our legal system accepts the restriction of liberty to protect against other harms than liberty-deprivation, such as by laws against slander, libel, and publications which grossly infringe privacy. What is the solution for John Rawls, faced with this criticism? One solution is, by the reflective equilibrium method, to justify abandoning the judgment that these actions are immoral.
    John RawlsTheories of Freedom
  •  834
    Utilitarianism versus the privileging of speech
    IJRDO Journal of Humanities and Social Science Research 8 (11): 12. 2022.
    Apparently the Western philosophical tradition has (wrongly) preferred speech over writing – so claims Jacques Derrida. In this paper, I consider whether utilitarianism involves such a preference. There are at least two arguments against the claim.
    UtilityDerrida: Speech and WritingUtilitarianism
  •  662
    Tribalism again? Annie Saumont’s ghostly story and the kalela dance paradox
    I draw attention to how Annie Saumont’s “You Should Have Changed at Dol” provides a solution to the paradox. With appropriate background knowledge, Saumont’s story, despite its modern form, displays various convergences with Descartes’ meditations; likewise the Bisa dance may feature convergences with traditional dance.
  •  433
    All-or-nothing reasoning and the kalela dance paradox
    An explanation for why the Bisa do not perform a traditional dance to express their identity is all-or-nothing reasoning: “We would have to water it down for this audience and that is not a Bisa dance.”
  •  516
    Why can’t we see this controversy? Bruno Latour, Greek myths, local alternatives
    This paper proposes (once again) that a controversy has been omitted from Robert Graves’s account of how the Greek myths became an established part of the British education system. I address a question from the secondary literature on Bruno Latour: why can’t we see this controversy? Two reasons are speculatively identified.
    Philosophy of History
  •  644
    The identity of Milan Kundera as astrologer
    In his The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, Milan Kundera describes how he was fired from his job and secretly wrote astrology columns. I register a puzzle that various readers should feel about this information, owing to the distinctive style of Kundera: how can this be kept a secret? I also propose solutions.
  •  484
    The memory skepticism solution to the surprise exam paradox
    Will a surprise exam happen in the next school week? The memory skepticism solution says, “The students should expect a rational student on the penultimate evening of that week to open themselves up to the possibility that the exam may have happened already, rather than predicting that the exam will happen tomorrow.”
    KnowabilityMemorySkepticism
  •  407
    Incentives to scan complex wholes?
    Robert Nozick declares that scanning complex wholes is not easy. Presumably few people exhibited the skill before Nozick, but I propose another explanation for why few people exhibit it than difficulty. Focusing specifically on scanning for inconsistencies, papers conveying them won’t look impressive to certain evaluators.
    The Nature of Philosophy
  •  505
    On the very idea of the political right wing: a paradox and meta-paradox
    This paper presents a paradox of the concept of the right wing, because it groups together significantly different political philosophies, in terms of premises and conclusions – ones that recommend a minimal state and ones oriented towards preserving the traditions of a community. It also presents a meta-paradox: everyone has noticed this and yet it is my paradox!
    Political Views, Misc
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