•  5
    Book reviews (review)
    with Tim Harris, Janice Mclaughlin, Richard Drake, John Peacock, K. Steven Vincent, Kjell Skyllstad, Bart Moore‐Gilbert, Paola S. Timiras, Margo Todd, Eoin Bourke, Elizabeth Sotirova, William Sweet, Sam W. Bloom, Bernard Yack, John Morton, Philip Morgan, Albert P. Fell, Javier Ibániez‐Noe, Javier Ibánez‐Noe, Jeremy Black, Janet Lungstrum, H. B. McCullough, Margaret Jennings, Roger Celestin, Douglas R. Skopp, Harvey J. Kaye, Michael O'Dea, Ian Fraser, Conal Condren, Susan M. Shell, Julian Young, George N. Leontsinis, John E. Weakland, Hermine W. Williams, Steven Beller, James A. Aho, Richard S. Findler, Anthony H. Galt, Ronald Hutton, Joachim Whaley, Gerald Seaman, Rudolf Dekker, Frans Coetzee, John Renwick, John Freeman, Rebecca W. Corrie, William N. Parker, Renato Cristi, Richard M. Swain, André Mineau, Linda Munk, Mark Walker, Martin Heyd, Danielle Johnson‐Cousin, Miles Taylor, and Susan Castillo
    The European Legacy 2 (7): 1231-1300. 1997.
    Sidney: Court Maxims. Edited and introduced by Hans Blom, Eco Haitsma‐Muller and Ronald Janse. Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought (Cambridge/New York/Melbourne: Cambridge University Press: 1996). xxxix + 216 pp., £35.00 cloth, £12.95 paper.The Politics of Women's Work: The Paris Garment Trades, 1750–1915. By Judith G. Coffin (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), 289 pp., $35/£28.50 cloth.Rethinking the Political: Gender, Resistance, and the State. By Barbara Laslett, Jo…Read more
  •  28
    MILL, JS On Liberty. Routledge. NYE, A. Feminist Theory and the Philosophies of Man. Rout-ledge. OAKLEY, J. Morality and the Emo (review)
    with P. Wittgenstein Johnston, J. Locke, Human Being Avebury Series, M. Midgeley, P. Osborne, and D. Gramsci Schechter
    Cogito 6 (1): 51-52. 1992.
  • Hegel, Marx and Dialectic: A Debate
    Philosophy 56 (216): 276-277. 1980.
  • Mental illness as a moral concept: The relevance of Freud
    In Roy Edgley & Richard Osborne (eds.), Radical philosophy reader, Verso. pp. 217--233. 1985.
  •  9
    La philosophie et l’autoroute électronique
    Horizons Philosophiques 6 (2): 43. 1996.
  •  122
  •  50
    Knowledge as a Social Phenomenon
    Radical Philosophy 52 (52): 34-7. 1989.
    The idea that knowledge is a social phenomenon is no longer either novel or unfamiliar. With the growth of the social sciences, we are accustomed to seeing ideas and beliefs in social and historical terms, and trying to understand how they arise and why they take the forms that they do. Philosophers, however, are only gradually coming to terms with these views. For they call in question ideas about the nature of knowledge which have dominated epistemology since the seventeenth century.
  •  13
    British universities have just gone through their third Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). The `research output' (i.e. publications) of every participating department has been graded by panels of `experts' on a seven point scale. The purpose of this massive operation is to provide a basis for distributing funds for research. In theory, the idea of allocating these scarce resources according to the standard of the work produced seems fair and reasonable; but in philosophy, at least, that is not …Read more
  •  55
    Progress and Social Criticism
    The European Legacy 2 (3): 544-549. 1997.
    In the `Preface' to the Phenomenology of Spirit, Hegel outlines the dialectical method and contrasts it with two other approaches. On the one hand, there is `material thinking' (das materielles Denken): `a contingent consciousness that is absorbed only in material stuff', a form of thought which is rooted in existing conditions and cannot see beyond them. At the `opposite extreme' is the transcendent critical method of `argumentation' (das Räsonieren), which involves `freedom from all content an…Read more
  •  36
    Contradiction and Dialectic
    Science and Society 55 (1). 1991.
    Confusingly, Marquit insists on describing his own position as `materialist dialectics'. I shall come to the question of materialism in due course; but dialectic it is not not, at least, in the usual sense of the term, which describes the philosophy of Hegel and classical Marxists like Engels and Lenin. This is quite explicitly a philosophy of contradiction, as Marquit himself demonstrates at some length (148-56). Its central tenet is that change is an essential feature of all concrete things; a…Read more
  •  249
    Why Work? Marx and Human Nature
    Science and Society 69 (4). 2005.
    Why work? Most people say that they work only as a means to earn a living. This is also implied by the hedonist account of human nature which underlies utilitarianism and classical economics. It is argued in this paper that Marx’s concept of alienation involves a more satisfactory theory of human nature which is rooted in Hegel’s philosophy. According to this, we are productive beings and work is potentially a fulfilling activity. The fact that it is not experienced as such is shown to be at the…Read more
  • Moral Values and Progress
    New Left Review (204): 67-85. 1994.
  •  9
    A Future for Socialism
    Philosophical Books 36 (3): 209-211. 1995.
  •  43
    Hiding behind the anodyne title of this book is a work of large scope and considerable interest for the Hegelian reader. Its main purpose is to vindicate a dialectical interpretation of Marxism in the context of recent analytical Marxism. The book falls into two parts. The first contains a detailed account of the dialectical philosophy implicit in Marx's work, and of its background in the philosophies of Kant and Hegel. The second shows how this account of Marx's approach can be used to resolve …Read more
  •  2
    The A-Z Guide to Modern Social and Political Theorists
    In Nöel Parker & Stuart Sim (eds.), , Prentice-hall/harvester Wheatsheaf. pp. 241-245. 1997.
  •  17
    Mao and the Cultural Revolution: What Went Wrong?
    China Now (100): 10-11. 1982.
  • (edited book)
    with David McLellan
    Macmillan. 1990.
  •  28
  • G. W. F. Hegel, The Philosophical Propaedeutic (review)
    Radical Philosophy 45 45. 1987.