21.
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Eco-ethica:
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2
Robert Bernasconi
Technology’s Assault on the Human Environment in the Work of Jakob von Uexküll, Kurt Goldstein, and Georges Canguilhem
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22.
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Eco-ethica:
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Pierre-Antoine Chardel
L’éco-éthique de Tomonobu Imamichi pour le XXIème siècle:
—Enjeux et perspectives critiques—
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23.
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Eco-ethica:
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Peter Kemp
La formation de l’idée de l’Éco-éthique
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24.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
2
Peter McCormick
Social Justice, Interpretation, and Literary Works of Art:
From Jurisprudence to Eco-Ethical Aesthetics and Back
abstract |
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rights & permissions
The persistence of some central instances of social injustice in European democracies governed by the rule of law; despite abundant resources for durably reducing them, is poorly understood. Understanding better the nature of law as constructive interpretation may strongly motivate future applications of the rule of law to alleviating substantially the social injustice of unnecessary yet continuing destitution among many persons, particularly in affluent and resourceful Paris. However, recent critical examinations of the nature of law as constructive interpretation have uncovered a crucial problem with this otherwise cogent account. Here, I show how some eco-ethical reflection on the nature of aesthetic interpretation may suggest a way for resolving this problem with the nature of jurisprudential interpretation. If correct, a further developed version of this analysis may re-open constructively interpretive ways towards more socially effective means for applying the rule of law to help in the elimination of the persistent social injustice of widespread impoverishment in Paris and in other similarly governed major world cities.
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25.
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Eco-ethica:
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2
Mireille Delmas-Marty
Vers une communauté mondiale de valeurs
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26.
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Eco-ethica:
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2
Soheil Kash
La Guerre comme essence du politique
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27.
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Eco-ethica:
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David M. Rasmussen
The Emerging Domain of the Political
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rights & permissions
This essay deals with two conceptions of the political; one that entails a clash of civilizations associated with a Schmittian critique of liberalism and a second which envisions the political as an emerging domain. The latter idea can be associated with the later work of John Rawls which separates the comprehensive from the political. I argue that it is this idea when reconstructed in relationship to a theory of multiple modernities that can be appropriated for an emerging notion of global justice. Hence, it is in the domain of the political that we should look for a new and emerging concept of justice.
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28.
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Eco-ethica:
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2
Rebecka Lettevall
Virtues and Vices — Eco-Ethical Perspectives on Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism—
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29.
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Eco-ethica:
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Peter Kemp
Droit et éthique —dans un monde de concurrence et de terrorismen —
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30.
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Eco-ethica:
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Noriko Hashimoto
Nature, Technology, Out of Control:
— From the point of view of Inter-Objectivity —
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31.
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Eco-ethica:
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Tilman Borsche
Überlegungen zu einer kosmopolitischen Kultur im Umgang mit unterschiedlichen Tugendlehren
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32.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
2
Marie-Hélène Parizeau
Métropoles, spacialité et discours politiques de la modernité
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33.
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Eco-ethica:
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2
Jacob Dahl Rendtorff
L’éthique de la reconnaissance des cultures
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34.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
2
The Authors
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35.
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Eco-ethica:
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3
Lars Hertzberg
Nature is Dead, Long Live The Environment!
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36.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
3
Rebecka Lettevall
The nature of war and the culture of peace
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37.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
3
Peter Kemp, Noriko Hashimoto
Preface
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38.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
3
Bernard Reber
L ’éthique de la vie, entre écologie sociale et philosophie biologique
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39.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
3
Richard Kearney
Translating across Faith Cultures:
Radical Hospitality
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40.
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Eco-ethica:
Volume >
3
Bengt Kristensson Uggla
Ricœur’s History:
The Historical Horizon in Paul Ricœur’s Philosophical Project
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