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161. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
A. F. Pomeroy Ontological Borders: On Lives Precarious and Degraded
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Judith Butler maintains that the universality of the precarity of life confirms the interdependence of lives. Such interdependence makes us fundamentally responsible for the lives of Others. Through the application of Marx’s critique of capitalism as ontological degradation, we ask whether the notions of a life and of lives as Butler outlines them in her recent works are adequate to ground moral understanding and practice, or whether, the manner in which human lives produce and reproduce themselves within the capitalist context (now being globalized) problematizes the revision of the ethical. We therefore expand from her claim that “moral theory has to become social critique if it is to know its object and act upon it” (Butler, 2004).
162. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Mechthild Nagel Philosophy beyond the Carceral
163. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Suzanne Hamilton Risley If We Were Really Being Deceived: The Spaces of Animal Oppression in the US, Bad Faith, and the Engaged Exposé
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Current struggles over laws prohibiting and criminalizing the public disclosure of violence in the spaces of animal use in the US have underscored the centrality of exposés to animal activism. This article complicates the activist belief in the power of exposure—“If slaughterhouses had glass walls . . .”—by drawing on the insights of Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir concerning the prevalence of bad faith in systems of oppression and exploitation. I describe four forms of bad faith common to these systems, and offer suggestions for exposés of the animal enterprise modeled on Sartre’s and de Beauvoir’s “engaged exposés.”
164. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Richard Peterson Questioning the Late Foucault: Liberalism and the Problem of Politics
165. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Mladjo Ivanovic Orcid-ID Holding Hands with Death: The Dark Side of Our Humanitarian Present
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This paper explores the historical conditions under which the object of humanitarian discourse is conceived and organized. What is problematic about this discourse is not only the alarming reality of humanitarianism’s intertwinement with militarism and political power, but also the calculated arbitrariness of redress that brings into question which norms guide public articulations of victims’ suffering. By questioning how a specific understanding of the other is formed, this paper aims to draw attention to the inconsistencies associated with the problematic relation between witnessing atrocities and the moral responses that this should entail.
166. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Alberto Hernandez-Lemus Beyond Pensiero debole in Latin America: Territories Outside State Structures
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Taking the work of Gianni Vattimo and Santiago Zabala, Hermeneutic Communism, as a point of departure, this essay explores the concept of pensiero debole (weak thought) and its application to progressive contemporary Latin American governments, which the authors describe as “communist in spirit.” The essay embraces pensiero debole as a method to disagree with Vattimo and Zabala’s assessment and to contrast the policies of state capitalism carried out by those governments to the praxis of anti-systemic social movements engaged in a reformulation of territorial autonomy consonant with what John Holloway calls Change the World Without Taking Power.
167. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
W. Ezekiel Goggin Robyn Marasco on Dialectical Despair and the Sources of Critical Theory
168. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Shari Stone-Mediatore Masculinity and the War on Terror
169. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Anna Malavisi Cuban Philosophers and a Battle for Ideas
170. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
Harry van der Linden Arguments against Drone Warfare with a Focus on the Immorality of Remote Control Killing and "Deadly Surveillance"
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Drone warfare, particularly in the form of targeted killing, has serious legal, moral, and political costs so that a case can be made for an international treaty prohibiting this type of warfare. However, the case would be stronger if it could be shown that killing by drones is inherently immoral. From this angle I explore the moral significance of two features of this technology of killing: the killing is done by remote control with the operators geographically far away from the target zone and the killing is typically the outcome of a long process of surveillance. I argue that remote control killing as such might not be inherently wrong but poses the risks of globalizing conflict and prioritizing troop protection above civilian safety, while the “deadly surveillance” aspect of drone killing makes it most clearly intrinsically wrong.
171. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Contributors
172. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
José Jorge Mendoza Orcid-ID Introduction
173. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Harry van der Linden Editor's Introduction
174. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Lawrence Blum White Privilege, Injustice, and the "Black Lives Matter" Movement
175. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Myisha Cherry The Color and Content of Their Fears: A Short Analysis of Racial Profiling
176. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
John Murungi Naomi Zack and In-Your-Face Philosophy
177. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Naomi Zack Orcid-ID The Idea of White Privilege, Rights, and Gender: Replies to My Critics
178. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Mark Balawender Conversations on Dialogue
179. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Yuanfang Dai Feminist Comparative Philosophy
180. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 19 > Issue: 3
Noah De Lissovoy Science, Culture, and the Meaning of Objectivity