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Just War Criteria and Theocentric EthicsIn Lisa Sowle Cahill & James F. Childress (eds.), Christian ethics: problems and prospects, Pilgrim Press. 1996.
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8Nationalist Morality and Crimes Against HumanityIn Aleksandar Jokic (ed.), War Crimes and Collective Wrongdoing: A Reader, Wiley-blackwell. 2001.
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15Global Institutional Reform and Global Social Movements: From False Promise to Realistic HopeCornell International Law Journal 39 501-14. 2006.
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98Killing for the homeland: Patriotism, nationalism and violence (review)The Journal of Ethics 1 (2): 165-185. 1997.Political choices favoring one''s country or one''s nationality are wrong if they conflict with a principle of universal free acceptability, prohibiting choices that violate every set of rules to which any willing cooperator would want all to conform. Despite its universalism, this principle requires patriotic favoritism in political choices and permits individuals to assert nationalist interests in claims for state aid. But it deprives patriotism and nationalism of any distinctive role in estab…Read more
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23Marxist Philosophy of ScienceIn Edward Craig (ed.), Routledge encyclopedia of philosophy: Luther to Nifo, Volume 6, Routledge. 1998.
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Cosmopolitan respect and patriotic concernIn Gillian Brock & Harry Brighouse (eds.), The Political Philosophy of Cosmopolitanism, Cambridge University Press. 2005.
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4Questions of Power in Political TheoryIn John S. Nelson (ed.), What should political theory be now?, State University of New York Press. 1983.
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3Producing ChangeIn Terence Ball & James Farr (eds.), After Marx, Cambridge University Press. 1984.
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41Unlearning American PatriotismTheory and Research in Education 5 (1): 7-21. 2007.Immoral excesses of American foreign policy are so severe and so deep-rooted that American patriotism is now a moral burden. This love, which pulls toward amnesia, wishful thinking and inattention to urgent foreign interests, should be replaced by commitment to a global social movement that seeks to hem in the American empire. Teachers can advance this cause without abusing their positions. But to do so, they must violate distinctive social expectations at different levels of American education.
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1Terrorism, War and EmpireIn James P. Sterba (ed.), Terrorism and International Justice, Oxford University Press. 2003.
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4The Critique of GlobalizationIn Michel Seymour & Matthias J. Fritsch (eds.), Reason & emancipation: essays on the philosophy of Kai Nielsen, Humanity Books. 2007.
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5Justice as Social FreedomIn Kai Nielsen, Rodger Beehler, David Copp & Béla Szabados (eds.), On the track of reason: essays in honor of Kai Nielsen, Westview Press. 1992.
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28Too much inequalitySocial Philosophy and Policy 19 (1): 275-313. 2002.It used to seem so simple. In the old days , most political philosophers who were inclined to call themselves “egalitarian” thought that one or another version of this argument established at least the approximate truth about economic justice
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76Relationships of Equality: A Camping Trip Revisited (review)The Journal of Ethics 14 (3-4): 231-253. 2010.G. A. Cohen incisively argued that our judgments of social justice should fit our convictions about how to interact with others in our personal lives. Ironically, the ordinary morality of cooperation invoked in his last book undermines his favored principle of equality, and supports John Rawls' reliance on a relevantly impartial choice promoting appropriate fundamental interests as a basis for distributive standards. His further objections to Rawls' account of distributive justice neglect the ro…Read more
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82Productive forces and the forces of change: A review of Gerald A. Cohen, Karl Marx's theory of history: A defense (review)Philosophical Review 90 (1): 91-117. 1981.
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71Marx and Aristotle: A Kind of ConsequentialismCanadian Journal of Philosophy 11 (sup1): 323-352. 1981.
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4IndexIn Moral differences: truth, justice, and conscience in a world of conflict, Princeton University Press. pp. 393-396. 1992.
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4IntroductionIn Moral differences: truth, justice, and conscience in a world of conflict, Princeton University Press. pp. 3-9. 1992.
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2Chapter three. Limitless dissentIn Moral differences: truth, justice, and conscience in a world of conflict, Princeton University Press. pp. 82-113. 1992.