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The Acorn

Volume 18, Issue 1/2, Spring/Fall 2018

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1. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Greg Moses

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2. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Andrew Fiala

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Pacifism is often painted into a corner as an absolute rejection of all violence and war. Such a dogmatic and negative formulation of pacifism does leave us with pacifism as a morally problematic position. But pacifism is not best understood as a negative claim. Nor is pacifism best understood as a singular or monistic concept. Rather, there is a “pacifist tradition” that is grounded in an affirmative claim about the importance of nonviolence, love, community building, and peaceful conflict resolution. This more positive conception of pacifism aims to transform social and political life. When understood in this way, pacifism is a robust and useful critical social theory. This paper explores the philosophy of pacifism in an attempt to reconceptualize pacifism as a tradition of normative critical theory. The paper argues that pacifism ought to be understood on analogy with other critical theories—such as feminism; that pacifism should be understood in terms of the “pacifist tradition”—along lines familiar from interpretations of the “just war tradition”; and that pacifism should be seen as offering interesting themes and ideas that are worthy of philosophical attention.
3. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Steven Steyl

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Though warfare has been a popular subject of inquiry in Aristotelian virtue ethics since antiquity, pacifism has almost never been afforded sympathetic study. This paper helps to fill that lacuna by asking whether and how secular virtue ethics can provide a theory of pacifism, whether and how it might defeat some common/foreseeable objections, and what additional work needs to be done in order for virtue ethicists to provide a philosophically robust account of pacifism. I begin by translating a pacifist argument from suffering into an argument from the virtue of compassion. Compassionate agents, sensitive as they are to others’ plights, will be highly averse to lethal warfare. In the second section, I argue that cases for pacifism like this one, which are rooted in individual virtues, cannot constitute a complete argument for pacifism because of the commonly held view that the virtues are reciprocal/unified, and that such an argument will therefore require supplementation in order to be action-guiding. The third section elaborates on what I call the impracticality objection. Any convincing account of pacifism will have to respond to this objection, and I argue that virtue ethical pacifism is especially vulnerable to it. In the fourth section, I highlight two avenues available to the virtue ethicist who defends pacifism from the impracticality objection. Neither of these avenues is viable without further research, however, so while I insist that virtue ethical pacifism is not defeated by the impracticality objection, I maintain also that this form of pacifism requires further scholarly work.

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4. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Tommy Curry, Anthony Neal, Dwayne A. Tunstall

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5. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Duane L. Cady

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6. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Arnold L. Farr

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7. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Court Lewis

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8. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Tom Hastings

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9. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Walter “Jerry” Kendall

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10. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Court Lewis

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11. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2
Court Lewis

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12. The Acorn: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/2

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