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Philosophy and Public Affairs
John Haldane
- 28 Aug 2000
3.7K
TL;DR: Haldane as mentioned in this paper presents a tale of three Karls: Marx, Popper, Polyani and post-socialist Europe, with a focus on individualism, science, knowledge and virtue.
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Abstract: 1. Introduction John Haldane 2. In defence of individualism Samuel Brittan 3. Market boundaries and human goods Russell Keat 4. A tale of three Karls: Marx, Popper, Polyani and post-socialist Europe David Marquand 5. Liberty's hollow triumph John Skorupski 6. Politics, religion and national identity Gordon Graham 7. Contemporary art, democracy, and the state George Walden 8. Popular culture and public affairs Bryan Appleyard 9. Welfare and the state Melanie Phillips 10. Questions of begging Tony Skillen 11. Philosophy and educational policy Anthony O'Hear 12. What did John Dewey want? Alan Ryan 13. Educating for citizenship David Alton 14. Being human: science, knowledge and virtue John Haldane.
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Citations
A Rawlsian View of CSR and the Game Theory of its Implementation (Part I): the Multi-stakeholder Model of Corporate Governance
Lorenzo Sacconi,Lorenzo Sacconi +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive essay on the Rawlsian view of corporate social responsibility (CSR) is presented, which is defined as a multi-stakeholder model of corporate governance and objective function based on the extension of fiduciary duties towards all of the firm's stakeholders.
Technological revolutions: ethics and policy in the dark
Nick Bostrom
- 22 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore some of these difficulties and the challenges they pose for a rational assessment of the ethical and policy issues associated with anticipated technological re-volutions, including the unpredictability of their long-term impacts, the problematic role of human agency in bringing them about, and the fact that technological revolutions reshape not only the material conditions of our existence but also reshape culture and even human nature.
Humanitarian Intervention: Three Ethical Positions
TL;DR: The three ethical positions Laberge outlines in this article are: (1) Rawlsian ethics, which are distinct from the ethics of Immanuel Kant and John Rawls himself; (2) the position of Michael Walzer adapted from J. S. Mill; and (3) a position most recently articulated by the Canadian philosopher Howard Adelman on the “Anglo-American” debate, which developed out of Walzer's position.
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Beyond Barnard: Liberalism, Antipornography Feminism, and the Sex Wars
TL;DR: The relationship between antipornography feminism and liberalism has been explored in this article, where the authors argue that the early 1970s anti-feminism emerged as an emphatic critique of liberalism and was transformed over the course of the 1980s and 1990s into a widely accepted tenet of liberalism itself.
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References
•Book
Situation Ethics: The New Morality
Joseph Fletcher
- 01 Jun 1966
TL;DR: In this paper, a new Christian ethic based on individual freedom and responsibility is described. But it does not consider the role of government in the development of the new Christian beliefs. But
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