TL;DR: The English Translation Translator's Note Abbreviations of Nietzsche's Works 1. The Tragic 2. Active and Reactive 3. Critique 4. From Ressentiment to the Bad Conscience 5. The Overman: Against the Dialectic Conclusion Notes as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Preface to the English Translation Translator's Note Abbreviations of Nietzsche's Works 1. The Tragic 2. Active and Reactive 3. Critique 4. From Ressentiment to the Bad Conscience 5. The Overman: Against the Dialectic Conclusion Notes.
TL;DR: The legal conscience of the civilized world has been identified as a gift of civilization as mentioned in this paper, and international law as a philosophy: Germany 1871-1933 4. International law as sociology: French'solidarism'1871-1950 5. Lauterpacht: the Victorian tradition in international law 6. Out of Europe: Carl Schmitt, Hans Morgenthau and the turn to 'international relations'
Abstract: Introduction 1. 'The legal conscience of the civilized world' 2. Sovereignty: a gift of civilization 3. International law as philosophy: Germany 1871-1933 4. International law as sociology: French 'solidarism' 1871-1950 5. Lauterpacht: the Victorian tradition in international law 6. Out of Europe: Carl Schmitt, Hans Morgenthau and the turn to 'international relations' Epilogue.
TL;DR: In this paper, Ignatieff charts the rise of the new moral interventionists who believe that other people's misery concerns us all, introduces the new ethnic warriors who have escalated post-modern war to an unprecedented level of savagery and draws conclusions about the ambiguous ethics of engagement and the limited force of moral justice in a world of war.
Abstract: Ignatieff charts the rise of the new moral interventionists who believe that other people's misery concerns us all, introduces the new ethnic warriors who have escalated post-modern war to an unprecedented level of savagery and draws conclusions about the ambiguous ethics of engagement and the limited force of moral justice in a world of war.
TL;DR: The Seduction of War: Beautiful Souls/Just Warriors: The Seduction and seduction of war as mentioned in this paper is an excellent account of women as warriors in the First World War.
Abstract: Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: Beautiful Souls/Just Warriors: The Seduction of War 1: Not-a-Soldier's Story: An Exemplary Tale A Child of the 1950s: Images of War and Martyrdom The Growing Up of a Political Theorist 2: The Discourse of War and Politics: From the Greeks to Today Taming Homer's Warrior: Plato and Aristotle The Ideal Republic: Machiavelli and Rousseau The Nation-State The Revolutionary Alternative: Marx and Engels The "Science" of War and Politics: International Relations Becomes an Academic Discipline 3: Exemplary Tales of Civic Virtue Women and the Civil War The First World War: "My Nation-State, of Thee I Shout" 4: The Attempt to Disarm Civic Virtue The Christian Conundrum: From Pacifists to Reluctant Warriors Just War, Holy War, and the Witness of Peace Female Privatization: The Beautiful Soul Implications of the Just-War Tradition 5: Women: The Ferocious Few/The Noncombatant Many The Historic Cleavage Female Group Violence The Ferocious Few The Noncombatant Many 6: Men: The Militant Many/The Pacific Few The Militant Many The Pacific Few The Literature of War Structures of Experience: The Good Soldier/The Good Mother 7: Neither Warriors nor Victims: Men, Women, and Civic Life The Liberal Conscience Uncertain Trumpet: Feminism's War with War Women as Warriors: "You're in the Army Now" Beyond War and Peace Epilogue Notes Index
TL;DR: The Moral Reading and the Majoritarian Premise as mentioned in this paper is a collection of essays about life, death, race, education, equality, and the right to be free from government censorship and censorship.
Abstract: Introduction: The Moral Reading and the Majoritarian Premise PART I: LIFE, DEATH AND RACE 1. Roe in Danger 2. Verdict Postponed 3. What the Constitution Says 4. Roe was Saved 5. Do We Have a Right to Die? 6. Gag Rule and Affirmative Action PART II: SPEECH, CONSCIENCE, SEX AND VOTES 7. The Press on Trial 8. Why Must Speech be Free? 9. Pornography and Hate 10. MacKinnon's Words 11. Why Academic Freedom? PART III: JUDGES 12. Bork: The Senate's Responsibility 13. What Bork's Defeat Meant 14. Bork's Own Postmortem 15. The Thomas Nomination 16. Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas 17. Learned Hand Notes Sources Index