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Andrew Bowyer
University of Edinburgh
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  •  Publications
    7
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    7

 More details
  • University of Edinburgh
    Department of Philosophy
    Graduate student
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Religion
20th Century Philosophy
  • All publications (7)
  •  2
    Book Review: Vincent W. Lloyd, In Defense of Charisma (review)
    Studies in Christian Ethics 33 (3): 424-427. 2020.
    Christianity
  •  5
    Book Review: Celia Deane-Drummond and Rebecca Artinian-Kaiser (eds), Theology and Ecology across the Disciplines: On Care for Our Common Home (review)
    Studies in Christian Ethics 33 (2): 271-274. 2020.
    Christianity
  •  4
    Book Review: Jennifer Beste, College Hookup Culture and Christian Ethics: The Lives and Longings of Emerging Adults (review)
    Studies in Christian Ethics 32 (4): 549-552. 2019.
    Christianity
  •  12
    Book Review: Vincent J. Miller , The Theological and Ecological Vision of Laudato Si’: Everything is Connected (review)
    Studies in Christian Ethics 32 (2): 296-300. 2019.
    Christianity
  •  19
    Book Review: Daniel P. Scheid, The Cosmic Common Good: Religious Grounds for Ecological Ethics (review)
    Studies in Christian Ethics 31 (2): 253-257. 2018.
    Christianity
  •  13
    Moral Philosophy after Austin and Wittgenstein: Stanley Cavell and Donald MacKinnon
    Studies in Christian Ethics 31 (1): 49-64. 2018.
    There are broad commonalities between the projects of Donald MacKinnon and Stanley Cavell sufficient to make the claim that they struck an analogous pose in their respective contexts. This is not to discount their manifest differences. In the milieu of 1960s and 1970s Cambridge, MacKinnon argued in support of a qualified language of metaphysics in the service of a renewed catholic humanism and Christian socialism. At Harvard, Cavell articulated commitments that made him more at home in the world…Read more
    There are broad commonalities between the projects of Donald MacKinnon and Stanley Cavell sufficient to make the claim that they struck an analogous pose in their respective contexts. This is not to discount their manifest differences. In the milieu of 1960s and 1970s Cambridge, MacKinnon argued in support of a qualified language of metaphysics in the service of a renewed catholic humanism and Christian socialism. At Harvard, Cavell articulated commitments that made him more at home in the world of North American secular political liberalism. Where Nietzsche, Hume, Freud, Heidegger, Emerson and Thoreau were Cavell’s inspirations, Butler, Kant, G. E. Moore, Collingwood and the New Testament were MacKinnon’s. For all the stark differences, commonalities abound and the reason for this can be traced to a shared appreciation of Austin’s contribution to the ‘lingusitic turn’ together with Wittgenstein’s later work. They both developed projects obsessed with the problem of scepticism together with a commitment to a creative re-animation of moral discourse in light of it, with MacKinnon defending a qualified ‘moral realism’, and Cavell, ‘moral perfectionism’. Seen together, a distinctive post-Kantian and post-Wittgensteinian therapeutic moral philosophy is in evidence.
    ChristianityPolitical Liberalism
  •  10
    Book Review: John Kiess, Hannah Arendt and Theology (review)
    Studies in Christian Ethics 30 (4): 504-507. 2017.
    Christianity
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