•  4
    Looking at the War Realistically
    In Anton Leist & Rolf Zimmermann (eds.), After the War?: How the Ukraine War Challenges Political Theories, De Gruyter. pp. 117-146. 2024.
  •  17
    After the War?: How the Ukraine War Challenges Political Theories (edited book)
    with Rolf Zimmermann
    De Gruyter. 2024.
    Russia’s war against Ukraine has grave consequences in several political categories. These include: a reassessment of the school of ‘political realism’, one of whose proponents claims to have predicted the war. Was the West partly ‘responsible’ for the war? Second, to what extent does the war of aggression, as an undeniable violation of law, damage the status of international law and justice? Third, the war is embedded in political developments that stretch back a century. It is examined in its …Read more
  • J.M. Coetzee and Ethics (edited book)
    Columbia University Press. 2010.
  •  75
    J. M. Coetzee and Ethics: Philosophical Perspectives on Literature (edited book)
    Columbia University Press. 2010.
    This collection takes stock of J.M. Coetzee's impact from a number of interesting angles, Including animals, sexuality, race, and reason. The time is truly ripe for such a volume.
  •  2
    Naturalismus bei Foot und Hursthouse
    In Thomas Hoffmann & Michael Reuter (eds.), Natürlich gut: Aufsätze zur Philosophie von Philippa Foot, De Gruyter. pp. 121-148. 2010.
  •  10
    Equality and Merit. Through Experiments to Normative Justice
    Analyse & Kritik 42 (1): 137-170. 2020.
    When we want to justify claims against one another, we discover that conceptual thought alone is not sufficient to legitimize property and income in the relative and proper proportions among members of a productive group. Instead, the basis for justification should also be seen in motivational states, validated less by rational thought than by an effective behaviour. To circumnavigate otherwise dangerously utopian claims to justice, the social sciences, and especially behavioural economics, are …Read more
  •  6
    Axel Honneth: Die Idee des Sozialismus
    Philosophische Rundschau 63 (2): 168. 2016.
  •  18
    What makes bodies beautiful
    Leist, Anton . What Makes Bodies Beautiful. Journal of Philosophy and Medicine, 28:187-219. 2003.
    Health and beauty are the most important physical ideals. This paper seeks to compare and contrast these ideals, based on a value theory of human abilities. Health is comprehended as a potential ability to act grounded in bodily functions. Beauty is explained as a symbolising reference to happiness, physical beauty as a combination of organic orientation to purpose and virtuous orientation to action. Physical beauty is the implicit symbolic expression of mental and physical health. This teleolog…Read more
  •  39
    Ein Plädoyer für die Beendigung der Suche nach Wahrheitskriterien
    Zeitschrift Für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 6 (2): 217-234. 1975.
    Es soll die These begründet werden, daß die Suche nach Wahrheitskriterien als philosophische Anstrengung sinnlos ist, weil einerseits mit Wahrheit ein Absolutheitsanspruch der Erkenntnis erhoben werden muß, andererseits aber ein solcher Anspruch mit Hilfe von Wahrheitskriterien nicht eingelöst werden kann. Die Begründung faßt den spezifischen Geltungscharakter des Wahrheitsanspruchs und einen unausweichlichen Regreß bei Wahrheitsfragen als geeignete Hinweise auf, daß und wieso Wahrheitskriterien…Read more
  •  5
    Menschenwürde als Ausdruck
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 53 (4). 2005.
  •  14
    In Geschichten verstrickt. Uber: Peter Bieri: Das Handwerk der Freiheit
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 52 (2): 313. 2004.
  •  9
    Am Abgrund der Gründe
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 51 (2). 2003.
  •  7
    Der moralische Kontraktualismus ist neben der kantischen und utilitaristischen Tradition die dritte Haupttradition einer aufgeklärten Moralphilosophie. Seine Kernthese besagt, daß moralische Normen und Forderungen legitim sind, wenn die Betroffenen sich aus ihren Interessen heraus auf die Etablierung dieser Normen hätten einigen können. Eine vernünftige Moral ist demnach, obwohl sie Freiheitsbeschränkungen verlangt, zum gegenseitigen Vorteil der Einzelnen. Die Autoren des Bandes diskutieren im L…Read more
  •  14
    Angewandte Ethik zwischen theoretischem Anspruch und sozialer Funktion
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 46 (5): 753. 1998.
  •  12
    Gerechtigkeit bauen – Variationen mit Hume
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 62 (6): 1029-1061. 2014.
    Among philosophers and social scientists, Hume’s idea of justice is generally identified with a system of rules based on mutual advantage, their moral quality playing either an insignificant or no part at all. This conventional or contractarian model, respectively, is not adequate to the special institution of morality or, in Hume, to the virtues, artificial or natural. It is not self-interest but sympathy in combination with the indirect passions of pride and humility that gives conventions the…Read more
  •  18
    Troubling oneself with ends
    In Paul Blackledge & Kelvin Knight (eds.), Virtue and Politics: Alasdair Macintyre's Revolutionary Aristotelianism, University of Notre Dame Press. 2011.
  •  82
    Ethik der Abtreibung: Ein Überblick
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 45 (3). 1991.
    The article gives an overview on arguments typically used within discussions on the ethical aspects of abortion. Five types of argument especially are analyzed more closely. Only one type withstands critical scrutiny: so-called interest-arguments, arguments referring to whether or when being killed (as involved in abortion) is against the interest of the fetus. In critical revision of a proposal due to Peter Singer the result is that abortion should be seen as morally neutral up to four months o…Read more
  •  1
    Rorty, oder: Kann man alles bestreiten und dennoch Philosoph bleiben?
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 44 (2): 255-258. 1996.
  •  9
    Kollektive Güter und individuelle Verantwortung
    Analyse & Kritik 11 (2): 179-196. 1989.
    In acting within large groups the single actor typically suffers from the symptom of irrelevance of his contribution. A single contributory effect may be extremely small or, due to ‘threshold effects’, even non-existent. Given such conditions not only self-interested action, also purely altruistically motivated contribution seems to be rendered irrational. The article reasons that the famous ‘principles of generalization’ are of no help on this problem. However, a ‘principle of division’ could b…Read more