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1. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 9 > Issue: 3
Robert L. Armstrong, Jay A. Knaack How Are Obligations to Oneself Possible?
...,” one which defines obligation in terms of coercion and the social-moral model ... cases of social and moral obligation. The second model, the Rousseau-Hart-Rawls ... The concept of obligation occupies a central position in democratic, social ...
2. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 26 > Issue: 1
Andrea Austen A Feminist Reconstruction of Bradley’s Ethical Idealism
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In this paper I defend certain features of F. H. Bradley's moral, and to a lesser extent political, philosophy in the wake of recent feminist critiques of ethics. I attempt to establish congeniality with Bradley's ethical and political theory to current discussions in feminist ethics. Not only is Bradley's idealism consistent with feminist ethics, but it is able to meet several standard feminist objections to traditional moral theory. In spite of making sexist comments characteristic of the nineteenth century, Bradley's ethical-political doctrine does not necessarily imply sexism, and is indeed coextensive with much current feminist theory. Before proceeding to this duscussion it is necessary to undertake a brief review of the intellectual origins of, and current state of debate in, feminist ethics.
... feminist theory (the promotion of the rights of women and of their equal social ... traditional women’s virtues and enshrining them in reformulations of ethical theory would ... directed and defined by social roles:To know a man...you must not take him in isolation ...
3. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 45 > Issue: 1
Simon Skempton Kant, Hegel, and the Moral Imagination
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This article addresses the question of whether Kantian moral formalism (Moralität) or Hegelian concrete ethical life (Sittlichkeit) is more relevant to the understanding of revolutionary changes in the moral attitudes of society. As Sittlichkeit conceives of morality as immanent to the existing conventions of society and Moralität involves principles that transcend any particular community, the former initially appears to be more conservative and the latter more potentially revolutionary. However, Moralität involves an individualized form of moral reasoning, whereas Hegelian modern Sittlichkeit involves a social form of moral reasoning based on relations of reciprocal recognition. It is argued here that Sittlichkeit so understood has the potential to overcome the limitations placed on the moral imagination (the ability to envisage contexts of suffering and repression) by abstract individualized reasoning.
...’s participation in the social institutions and conventions that would give ... ethical life in which norms and values are embodied and embedded in social ... widely used nowadays to refer to social morality in general, and not just to ...
4. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 14 > Issue: 1
Arthur W. Munk Kant: Moral Legislation and Two Senses of ‘Will’
...’s political and social philosophy and that of John Rawls as found in the latter’s recent ... of Kant’s moral theory. These he stated in terms of the German words Wille and ... than in the strictly legal sense, Willkür signifies that freedom to choose and act ...
5. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Robert Reuman Human Rights: Essays on Justification and Applications
..., central to all other moral considerations, and grounded in the necessary conditions of ... interfere with my freedom and well-being.” In this context, “freedom consists in ... circumstances, and well-being consists in having the other general abilities and conditions ...
6. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 11 > Issue: 3
A. T. Nuyen Moral Contracts and the Moral Self
...In this paper I want to posit and defend the idea of a moral contract that one ... clauses in the moral contract that we make with ourselves, and that these clauses ... gratifying to note that Armstrong and Knaack in a recent article have defended the idea ...
7. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 26 > Issue: 2
Hansjürgen Verweyen Social Contract Among Devils
... the theory of a “social contract among devils” in a system of morality, it is ... powers and the representation of the people in the government. “Democracy” in the ... intentions.’This theory of a social contract among rational beings with a natural ...
8. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 48 > Issue: 3
Fiorella Tomassini Kant’s Reformulation of the Concept of Ius Naturae
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Like previous theorists of natural law, Kant believes in the possibility (and necessity) of a rational theory of ius, but also claims that the very concept of ius naturae and the method of investigation of its principles must be thoroughly reformulated. I will maintain that Kant solves the methodological problem of natural law theories by stating that a rational doctrine of Right concerns pure rational knowledge. Right must be conceived as a metaphysical doctrine in which its principles and laws are determined a priori. By conceiving the idea of a “metaphysics of morals” and linking Right with it, he finds a way both to conserve the notion of ius naturae (i.e., rational and “immutable principles for any giving of positive law” (RL, AA 06: 229)) and to purify it from any empirical or anthropological element.
... in the conception of the obligation and its justification in particular. In the ... perfection is the obligation of living in conformity with nature, and vice ... ) In the second part of Theory and practice the critique of political eudaimonism ...
9. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 10 > Issue: 1
Robert N. Beck Liberty and Equality
... present debate about liberty and equality in the light of recent and current social ... under what Sabine called the occasion of a social theory, and he used the same ... himself in opposition to such recent influential writers as Hart and Rawls. Perhaps ...
10. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 26 > Issue: 3
Subject Index
...):164-165CORRESPONDENCESee RepresentationCOSMOLOGYAnd chaos theory24.3 (Fall ’94):269-281And idealism19 ... TheologyAnd community19.2 (May ’89):141-153And time19.2 (May ’89):141-153In Bosanquet12 ... ):101-104ACTIONAnd self20.3 (Sept. ’90):203-229And subject4.2 (May ’74):181-187In Arendt3.3 (Sept ...
11. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 14 > Issue: 2
Thomas M. Lennon Rules and Relevance: The AU-RU Equivalence Issue
..., however different may be the times and however different the societies in which they ... Wittgenstein’s of a society in which lumber is piled in arbitrarily varying heights and ... ). Instances of lying and promise breaking, for example, whose utilitarian advantage was in ...
12. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 42 > Issue: 1
Rocío Zambrana Kant's Hyperbolic Formalism
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Hegel famously argued that Kantian Moralität is an empty formalism. This article offers a defense of Kant’s formalism and suggests that it is crucial to Hegel’s own idealism. My defense, however, depends on reading Kantian morality non-morally, as a theory of normative authority. Through a reading of the Grundlegung and Religion, the article delineates Kant’s hyperbolic formalism—the insistence on giving an account of the form of rational agency by isolating willing from all content. The article accordingly assesses Kant’s understanding of autonomy as a matter of institution-subjection. It also critically engages Henry Allison’s groundbreaking work on Kant. Hegel follows Kant in arguing that determinacy is a matter of institution-subjection, and in the Logic provides a radically formalist justification of the role of normative authority in determinacy. Unlike Kant, who articulates institution-subjection as a matter of an isolated subject, Hegel shows that institution-subjection is a matter of social practices.
... moral law and in general acting according to the representation of laws (Wille ... -morally, as a theory of normative authority. Through a reading of the Grundlegung and ... -subjection, and in the Logic provides a radically formalist justification of the role of ...
13. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 16 > Issue: 3
Karen Hanson The Demands of Loyalty
... diversity of these social orderings, in both the feudal and the corporate worlds, pose ... ; and if the employee, aware that the issue of loyalty may arise in many and varied ... imperatives of loyalty. Loyalty can seem, in and of itself, a moral virtue. One keeps one ...
14. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 33 > Issue: 2/3
Idit Dobbs-Weinstein Whose History? Spinoza’s Critique of Religion As an Other Modernity
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This paper discusses Spinoza's critique of religion as a visible moment of a radically occluded materialist Judeo-Arabic Aristotelian philosophical tradition. While the prevailing (Christo-Platonic) tradition begins with the familiar gesture to metaphysics as first philosophy, Spinoza's thought (and thus, this Other Tradition) takes politics as its point of departure with its concrete emphasis on a critique of dogma. This paper will show-by way of differing readings of Spinoza-how this materialist tradition becomes occluded by the prevailing tradition, even in the work of such careful materialist Spinoza commentators as Etienne Balibar.
... complicit relations among language, representation, and doxa/prejudice, in order to show ... foundation of ethics/politics and with it the distinction between theory and practice. In ... , “faith” “charity,” andcontract,” or “covenant,” which occur almost exclusively in ...
15. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 1 > Issue: 2
J. E. Barnhart Egoism and Idealistic Freedom
... enjoy freedom, not despite the social organism, but in and through it. The ... Press, 1933), reprinted in John Somerville and Ronald E. Santoni (eds.), Social and ... well as into social and political philosophy. To be is to be related—that is the ...
16. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 5 > Issue: 2
Roger Hancock Kant and Civil Disobedience
... sovereign as its agent were to violate the original contract, and thereby in the ... social contract would remain in its indisputable authority: but not as a factum (as ... the essay, “Concerning the Common Saying: This May be True in Theory But Does Not ...
17. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 37 > Issue: 3
Matthew C. Altman, Cynthia D. Coe The Self as Creature and Creator: Fichte and Freud Against the Enlightenment
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The conception of subjectivity that dominates the Western philosophical tradition, particularly during the Enlightenment, sets up a simple dichotomy: either the subject is ultimately autonomous or it is merely a causally determined thing. Fichte and Freud challenge this model by formulating theories of subjectivity that transcend this opposition. Fichte conceives of the subject as based in absolute activity, but that activity is qualified by a check for which it is not ultimately responsible. Freud explains the behavior of the self in terms of biological drives and social pressures, yet both forces are actively interpreted by the subject itself. The tensions that arise from these very different approaches show that both Fichte and Freud are trying to overcome this deeply imbedded dichotomy between freedom and determinism. Although some would respond to these tensions by trying to forge a Hegelian synthesis, such a resolution covers over the paradoxical nature of finite subjectivity.
... faculty of representation (Vorstellungsvermögen), and in the Beyträge zur Berichtigung ... and object in the representation-relation. The fact of consciousness ultimately ... responsible. Freud explains the behavior of the self in terms of biological drives and ...
18. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Beverly L. Kahn Toward the Construction of a Theory of Political Action: Antonio Gramsci
... and representation of Carol Pateman and Hannah Pitkin. Unfortunately, in ... Marx developed his materialism, in part, via a transformative reading of Hegel, and ... ’s categories and premises on Gramsci results in a less than faithful portrait of Gramsci ...
19. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 32 > Issue: 1
Frederick Sontag Where Does American Philosophy Stand Today?
.... Certainly the swing went back toward conservatism in political theory and ethics, even ... philosophical theory in the name of the individual and newly explored modes of experience ... . These might lead us to new grounds in the new century to build theory and to make ...
20. Idealistic Studies: Volume > 36 > Issue: 3
Volumes 26–35 Cumulative Index
... ....................................................... 34:2/131 Bernstein, Jeffrey: Imagination and ‘Lunacy’ in Kant ... :1/31 Champagne, Roland A.: At the Intersection of Political Theory and ... Politics and the Limits of Justice in Perpetual Peace ...