Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Alternativ können Sie versuchen, selbst über Ihren lokalen Bibliothekskatalog auf das gewünschte Dokument zuzugreifen.
Bei Zugriffsproblemen kontaktieren Sie uns gern.
74174 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Continuum Ethics
Factualism, the explanatory requirement, and agency5 Hybrid theories; Building normative reasons out of motivating reasons; Building motivating reasons out of normative reasons; The identity thesis; 6 Constitutivism; Activities and aims; Hedonism; Action and knowledge; The knowledge constraint; Constitutivism and knowledge; Shmaction and shmagency; Constitutivism and error; The magic of constitutivism; 7 Anscombean views; Why?; The structure of action; Naïve action theory; Actions and facts; Keeping score; Activity and normativity; Conclusion; Notes; Further reading; Bibliography; Index.
In: Human development, Band 51, Heft 2, S. 148-152
ISSN: 1423-0054
In: Sociology, ethics and epistemology of sciences. Epistemology of normative sciences
According to the democratic interpretation of public reason, political justification ought to appeal to the tacit dimension or common sense of society's actual historical moment. This article claims that a consequence of this interpretation is that religious reasons can be stable public reasons. More specifically, it claims that religious reasons can be public reasons in pervasively religious communities that are democratic, even in circumstances of ongoing social secularization. Three theoretical consequences are derived from this claim: first, democratic public reason assumes more social integration than other interpretations of public reason; second, religious reasons are not always inaccessible to non-believers; and third, religious reasons, when public reasons, can have normative force upon non-believers. Additionally, the following practical implication is made explicit: while justification of state power can appeal to religious reasons only, the law cannot be written in religious terms.
BASE
In: Review of international studies: RIS, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 53-68
ISSN: 1469-9044
Many readers will have long known Professor Michael Walzer's remarkable book Just and Unjust Wars. The most interesting thing I can do is to discuss the way it has been received in some centres of the study of international relations in Britain. Professor Hedley Bull, Professor W. B. Gallic and Mr David Watt have reviewed it with Important differences but all to the same ultimate effect. Oxford, Cambridge and the Metropolis conclude that It Is a shallow book, lacking In philosophical depth.
In: European journal of international law, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 552-552
ISSN: 1464-3596
Blog: Blog - Adam Smith Institute
Bucolic romanticism might seem harmless. But it leads, if enacted, to hunger, ecological destruction or both, on a vast scale.This is entirely true. George Monbiot is talking about:Farming in Transylvania looks (or did until recently) just as it "ought" to look: tiny villages where cows with their calves, ducks with their ducklings and cats with their kittens share the dirt road with ruddy-cheeked farmers driving horses and carts; alpine pastures where sheep graze and people scythe the grass and build conical haystacks. In other words, as the king remarked, it looks like a children's book.That other reason being that this bucolic romanticism is also the same thing as gross and abject poverty. Really, truly vile standards of living. Which is why absolutely every human society that has been able to abandons it as soon as possible. We are talking of lifestyles of £2,000, perhaps £3,000 a year instead of the £30,000 enjoyed (that is about the median in today's UK) here. A tenth and worse of today's living that is. And yes, obviously, that is already correcting for the costs of things over time and geography.The problem with peasant farming, as with peasantry as a whole, is that peasants are poor, really, really, poor.This, of course, being why the British peasantry flocked in their hundreds of thousands to the dark Satanic mills as soon as the option was available. The people who'd done that backbreaking work for small reward weren't going to do it for a moment longer than absolutely necessary.
In: Jus cogens: a critical journal of philosophy of law and politics, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 41-58
ISSN: 2524-3985
In: The works of George Santayana volume VII
In: Life of reason, or, The phases of human progress book 4
Acknowledgments; Introduction by James Gouinlock; First Edition Contents; Chapter I: The Basis of Art in Instinct and Experience; Chapter II: Rationality of Industrial Art; Chapter III: Emergence of Fine Art; Chapter IV: Music; Chapter V: Speech and Signification; Chapter VI: Poetry and Prose; Chapter VII: Plastic Construction; Chapter VIII: Plastic Representation; Chapter IX: Justification of Art; Chapter X: The Criterion of Taste; Chapter XI: Art and Happiness; Chronology; Appendix; Variants to the Text of Reason in Art; Editorial Appendix; Explanation of the Editorial Appendix.
In: Social philosophy & policy, Band 12, Heft 1, S. 19-42
ISSN: 1471-6437
Law is the expression of public reason. I want to explicate and justify this assertion, which lies at the core of a normative theory of law. Primarily, I want to focus on the concept of public reason, showing what it is, relating it to private or individual reason, and finding its rationale in that relation. I shall then argue that public reason exhausts the normative space where law may be found. Appealing to public reason, I shall show that the authority that law claims over the judgments and actions of citizens must ultimately be grounded in their own rationality.
In: Policy review: the journal of American citizenship, Heft 127, S. 89-95
ISSN: 0146-5945
Berkowitz reviews Reason: Why Liberals Will Win the Battle for America by Robert B. Reich.