Raja Bahlul

Doha Institute for Graduate Studies
  •  129
    Identity and Necessary Similarity
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 22 (4): 531-546. 1992.
    The Principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles, commonly attributed to Leibniz, has given rise to much discussion and debate. Thus philosophers have argued over how it should be formulated, whether it is true, and what, if any, metaphysical consequences it has.It is not my intention to add to these discussions here, having done so elsewhere. Rather, I intend to introduce and defend a closely related principle which I shall, for want of a better name, refer to as The Principle of the Identity of…Read more
  •  1675
    Democracy without Secularism?
    In John Bunzl (ed.), Islam, Judaism, and the Political Role of Religions in the Middle East, University of Florida Press. pp. 99-118. 2004.
    The object of this paper is to present and discuss the way democracy is conceived of by some prominent Islamic thinkers. Their position is that democracy, rightly understood, is simply a method of dispensing, sharing, and managing political authority, and as such does not imply secularism or other values and practices that are associated with liberalism. This paper is conceived of within a broader project to theorize the relations (actual and possible) between Islam, democracy, and modernity.
  •  296
    Emotion as patheception
    Philosophical Explorations 18 (1): 104-122. 2015.
    Emotions cannot be fully understood in purely cognitive terms. Nor can they be fully understood as mere feelings with no content. But it has not been easy to give an account of the relation of affect and cognition in a way that preserves the perceived unity of emotional experience. Consequently, emotion theories tend to lean either toward cognitivism, or, alternatively, the view that emotions are basically non-cognitive affairs. The aim of this paper is to argue for an account of emotion as a un…Read more