توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Flourishing Lives
نام کتاب : Flourishing Lives
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : زندگی شکوفا
سری :
نویسندگان : Chartier, Gary
ناشر : Cambridge University Press
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 0
ISBN (شابک) : 9781108675253 , 9781108493048
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : epub درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF تبدیل می شود
حجم کتاب : 3 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Reviews
Half title
Title page
Imprints page
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
I. Natural Law and Liberalism
II. Aspects of Living Well
III. Choosing Well as Integral to Living Well
IV. Self and Other
V. The Shape of Liberalism
A. Varieties of Liberalism
B. The Liberal Spirit
C. A Liberal Social Order
D. Embracing Diversity
E. Diversity and Flourishing
F. Diversity and Social Ecology
G. Space for Social Conservatives?
H. Classical, Modern, and Radical Liberalism
VI. How an Unorthodox Version of Natural Law Theory Supports Radical Liberalism
A. Liberal Politics and Natural Law
B. Grounding Social Liberalism
C. Liberalism and the Left
VII. The Plan of the Book
1 Boycotts
I. Thinking Liberally about the Meat Industry
II. When must we Boycott?
III. Market Impact
A. The Consumer in Today’s Meat Market
B. Recovering the Vanishing Consequences
C. Muddying the Waters
1. Market Complexities
2. Impossible Calculations
3. Ripples in the Pond
4. Doubts about Thresholds
IV. Assessing Meat Industry Boycott Proposals
A. Purchasing Meat for One’s Own Consumption
B. Purchasing Meat for Commercial Use
C. Purchasing Meat for Consumption by Someone Else
D. Occasioning Others’ Meat Purchases
E. Consuming Unpurchased, Unrequested Meat
F. Purchasing Ordinary Commercial Dairy Products
1. Moral Concerns about Ordinary Commercial Dairy Products
2. Consumer Purchases
3. Commercial Purchases
V. Liberalizing Boycotts
2 Lies
I. Liberalism, Natural Law, and Truth
II. Self-Integration, Friendship, and the Wrongness of Lying
A. Lying and Self-Integration
B. Lying and Friendship
III. Acceptable Untruths
IV. Defending Defensive Deception
A. The Limits of Self-Integration
B. The Limits of Friendship
V. Lying Liberals?
3 Grades
I. Liberal Grading Practices
A. Grades in Court
B. Grades and Norms
II. Academic Exclusivity
A. Exclusivity and Truth-Telling
B. Exclusivity and Incommensurability
C. Competence
III. Academic Consequentialism and Retributivism
A. Academic Consequentialism
B. Academic Retributivism
IV. Assessing Common Academic Practices
A. Attendance and Participation
B. Reading and Writing Assignments
C. Service Learning
D. Group Activities
E Late Work
F. Incomplete Conversions and Other Grade Changes
G. Consistency
H. Academic Dishonesty
I. Extra Credit
V. Grading Liberally
4 Adversaries
I. Liberals in Court
II. Burling, Ennis, and Korematsu
A. Problems with the DeWitt Report
B. Framing the Report in the Korematsu Brief
C. Lawyers and the Adversarial Ethos
III. Questions about the Adversarial Ethos
A. The Public Executioner as Exemplary Adversarial Professional
B. Role Definitions and Practice Positivism
C. Justifying Adversarial Violations through Redescription
D. Justifying Adversarial Violations as Instances of Fair Play
E. Justifying Adversarial Violations Systemically
IV. Constraining Adversarial Exuberance
A. Applbaum’s Hesitancy about Condemning Some Adversarial Violations by Lawyers
B. The Extent of Professional Self-Critique
C. Settled Expectations and Lawyers’ Adversarial Violations
D. Fair Play and Lawyers’ Adversarial Violations
E. Systemic Consequences and Lawyers’ Adversarial Violations
V. Adversarial Virtue
5 Lawyers
I. Liberalism, Privacy, and Legal Practice
II. Clients’ Informational Privacy
III. Privacy and the Private Sphere
IV. Tensions in Lawyers’ Lives
V. Thinking about the Tension
6 Victims
I. Liberal Questions about the Victim Role
II. Rehabilitation and Incapacitation
A. Rehabilitation and Parole
B. Rehabilitation, Incapacitation, and Victim Testimony
III. Retribution
A. Retribution and Parole
B. Retribution and Victim Testimony
IV. Correction
A. Correction and Parole
B. Correctivism, Victims, and Parole
V. Consequentialism
A. Parole and Consequences
B. Consequentialism, Parole, and Victim Testimony
VI. Victimless Parole Decisions
7 Believers
I. American Faith and the Future of Liberalism
II. Religious Vision as a Source of Mischief?
A. The Retreat to Theory
B. Sources of Retreat
III. The Religion of America
A. An American Faith
B. Questioning “America”
IV. Transcendence and Critique
V. Politics and Spirituality
A. Brokenness is Real
B. Rediscovering Grace
C. Providence and Hope for America
VI. Freedom and Social Justice
A. Justice, Social and Otherwise
B. The Impact of Freedom
C. Freedom as a Path to Social Justice
VII. Toward Radical Liberalism
8 Interventions
I. Liberalism and War
II. Violence and Empire
A. Principled Limits on the Use of Force
B. Reasons to Avoid War
C. The Failings of Empire
III. Modern Liberal Interventionism
IV. A Modern Liberal Narrative
V. Questioning Interventionism
A. The Merits of “War”
B. Constraints on Force
C. The Growth of the National Security State
D. Acknowledging Blowback
E. Promoting Development
VI. Liberalism and Foreign Policy after Bush
VII. A Liberal Foreign Policy?
9 Anarchists
I. Defending Folk-Statism against Radical Liberalism
II. The Moral Argument from Conscience
A. Lack of Obligation
B. Reconstructing Murphy’s Argument
1. Refining Murphy
2. Justice and the State
3. Equating Legal and Political Obligation
4. Objective and Subjective Obligation
C. Questionable Premises
1. Empirical Doubts
2. Revising the Conscience Principle
3. Constrained Effects
D. Limited Results
1. No New Obligations
2. No Grounds for State Action
3. Citizens Alone
4. Limited Results
E. Minimal Effects
III. Epistemological Arguments
A. No Need for Positive Arguments?
B. Anti-Evidentialism and Ungrounded Statism
1. Assuming Ungrounded Statism
2. Assuming Anti-Evidentialism
3. Questionable Assumptions
C. Undermining Belief In Political Obligation
1. Justification without Foundations
2. An Overly High Threshold for Belief Rejection
3. Principles and the Unreasonableness of Statism
4. Burden-Shifting and Consequentialism
5. The Presumption of Anarchism
6. Unpersuasive Burden-Shifting
D. Folk-Statism and Rational Critique
IV. The Continued Appeal of Anarchism
Conclusion
Index
About the Author