•  4
    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.
  •  5
    The Need to Work: A Reply to Mr Higgins
    Radical Philosophy 47 48. 1987.
  • News
    Radical Philosophy 54 53. 1990.
  •  36
    Analytical Marxism and Morality
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 19 (sup1): 81-104. 1989.
  •  6
    This work contains a rigorous account of the philosophy of dialectic in Hegel and Marxism, which takes the form of a debate in which each author develops his own account and criticism of the other.
  •  131
    The concept of alienation is one of the most important and fruitful legacies of Hegel's social philosophy. It is strange therefore that Hegel's own account is widely rejected, not least by writers in those traditions which have taken up and developed the concept in the most influential ways: Marxism and existentialism.
  • Marxism, Intellectuals and Politics
    In David Bates (ed.), , Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 152-168. 2007.
  • Hegel, Marx and Dialectic
    Studies in Soviet Thought 25 (1): 67-69. 1983.
  • Engels Today: a Centenary Appreciation
    In Christopher J. Arthur (ed.), , Macmillan. pp. 153-172. 1996.
  • Socialism and Morality
    In David McLellan & Sean Sayers (eds.), , Macmillan. pp. 42-64. 1990.
  •  7
    Marxism and Human Nature
    Science and Society 64 (4): 524-526. 1998.
  •  27
    Review of Adriaan T. Peperzak, Modern Freedom: Hegel's Legal, Moral, and Political Philosophy (review)
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 49 158-163. 2004.
  • Letters
    Radical Philosophy 54 59. 1990.
  •  6
    According to Plato, the true philosopher will take on political power only with great reluctance. Onora O’Neill is a prominent political philosopher: specifically, a latter day Kantian and a follower of Rawls. She is also Principal of Newnham College, Cambridge and, as Baroness O’Neill of Bengarve, a crossbench Peer in the House of Lords. I have no idea whether she was at all reluctant to take on these positions. Happily, on the evidence of the present book, they do not appear to have compromise…Read more
  •  26
    Psychoanalysis and human rationality
    Journal of Social Philosophy 22 (2): 60-70. 1991.
    Freud is often credited with having revealed the irrational content of psychology and thus undermined traditional ideas of human rationality. This is only part of the truth. Psychoanalysis also questions traditional ideas of irrationality. It shows that dreams, neurotic symptoms and other apparently irrational psychological phenomena have a meaning and a rationality. Phenomenological (Laing) and hermeneutic (Ricoeur) accounts are criticized. Freud argues that there is a continuity between ration…Read more
  •  36
    Relativism
    International Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1): 123-124. 2004.