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4National Identity, Multiculturalism, and Aboriginal Rights: An Australian PerspectiveCanadian Journal of Philosophy 26 (sup1): 407-438. 1997.
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26Populism and civil society: The challenge to constitutional democracy By AndrewArato, Jean L.Cohen, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2022Constellations 30 (3): 358-360. 2023.Constellations, EarlyView.
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24Book ReviewsAvishai Margalit,. The Ethics of Memory.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002. Pp. 227. $24.95 ; $14.95 (review)Ethics 115 (4): 834-838. 2005.
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13A world we have lost: Remembering the Russian Revolution through Victor SergeConstellations 24 (4): 543-554. 2017.
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85Two Ghosts and an Angel: Memory and Forgetting in Hamlet_, _Beloved_, and _The Book of Laughter and ForgettingConstellations 16 (1): 125-149. 2009.No Abstract
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27The Truth of Morality and the Morality of TruthInternational Studies in Philosophy 29 (3): 13-28. 1997.
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Will Kymlicka and Wayne Norman, eds, Citizenship in Diverse SocietiesRadical Philosophy. forthcoming.
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46Memory, responsibility, and identitySocial Research: An International Quarterly 75 (1): 263-286. 2008.An important role of memory, both individual and collective, is to remind us of what we owe to the past. To understand this role, we need to conceive memory not merely in cognitive terms, but also as what Nietzsche called "memory of the will." It is this "conative" aspect of memory which explains the link between memory and identity. There still remain problems of how to explain how a collective memory "of the will" is transmitted over long periods of time, and how to explain certain familiar pa…Read more
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Memory, Responsibility, and IdentitySocial Research: An International Quarterly 75 263-286. 2008.An important role of memory, both individual and collective, is to remind us of what we owe to the past. To understand this role, we need to conceive memory not merely in cognitive terms, but also as what Nietzsche called "memory of the will." It is this "conative" aspect of memory which explains the link between memory and identity. There still remain problems of how to explain how a collective memory "of the will" is transmitted over long periods of time, and how to explain certain familiar pa…Read more
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86On being a personAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 74 (1). 1996.This paper questions the assumption that the term 'person' designates what we essentially are or ought to be. I use Hegel to argue against Locke and Kant that personal identity is not the foundation of certain legal and moral practices but their effect; and Nietzsche to suggest that being a person is the price we pay for certain kinds of social life. The concept of a person is an abstraction from our human and embodied existence, and to assume that it picks out what is central to our existence m…Read more
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45Living with reasonInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 35 (2). 1992.The aim of this paper is to identify and partially defend a form of practical reason involved in a number of central cases of human action. Against the claims of rational choice theory that reasoning about action is primarily instrumental, it argues for a form of practical reason which allows for the indeterminate, open?ended and creative nature of the most important examples of human action. Rational choice theory not only gives a distorted account of the reasoning involved in these cases; it a…Read more
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20Nation and IdentityRoutledge. 1999.Nation and Identity provides a concise and comprehensive account of the place of national identity in modern life. Ross Poole argues that the nation became a fundamental organising principle of social, political and moral life during the period of early modernity and that is has provided the organising principle of much liberal, republican and democratic thought. Ross Poole offers us a new and urgently needed analysis of the concept of identity, arguing that we are now in a position to envisage …Read more
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35Morality and ModernityRoutledge. 1991.Ross Poole displays the social content of the various conceptions of morality at work in contemporary society, and casts a strikingly fresh light on such fundamental problems as the place of reason in ethics, moral objectivity and the distinction between duty and virtue. The book provides a critical account of the moral theories of a number of major philosophers, including Kant, Marx, Nietzsche, Habermas, Rawls, Gewirth and MacIntyre. It also presents a systematic critique of three of the most s…Read more
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147Reviews : W.A. Suchting, Marx and Philosophy: Three Studies (London, Macmillan, 1986) (review)Thesis Eleven 24 (1): 161-166. 1989.
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33National Identity, Multiculturalism, and Aboriginal Rights: An Australian PerspectiveCanadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 22 407-438. 1996.
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