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Jason Caro [3]Jason S. Caro [1]Jason Salinas Caro [1]
  1.  65
    Levinas and the palestinians.Jason Caro - 2009 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 35 (6):671-684.
    Levinas is often credited with introducing a strong notion of ethics into postmodern thought. But his commitment to Zionism, his views on the Palestinian people, and his underformulated theory of justice raise questions about the desirability of his thinking for politics. In this study, the well-known encounter between Levinas and the Palestinians is addressed in order to determine how his philosophy of ethics can be deployed for political ends. As the philosopher famously concerned with the connection between self and the (...)
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  2.  24
    Against Levinas’ messianic politics: a polemic.Jason Caro - 2016 - Continental Philosophy Review 51 (1):1-21.
    Blamelessly, most commentators attempt to deduce the political theory of Levinas from his interhuman philosophy. In contrast to the perceived state of ethical life in contemporary politics, the attractiveness of the asymmetric obligations owed by the ego to the Other make the deductive project seem urgent. But an inductive analysis of Levinas’ philosophy yields troubling prerequisites, including rigorous theocracy and a form of sociability in which no epistemological clarity is permitted that could determine in situ interpersonal duties. Such unfamiliar politics (...)
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    Of Our Favorite Nietzschean Question.Jason S. Caro - 1999 - Political Theory 27 (6):750-768.
  4.  2
    Radical civility: a study in utopia and democracy.Jason Caro - 2023 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    Radical Civility unearths civility's extraordinary potential by addressing why the virtue has fallen into crisis, recalling the injunctions that transpose utopia upon the stingy politics of likelihood, and by offering a vision of citizens who find purpose in dignifying each other. Jason Caro takes a three pronged approach; first identifying the effects of the misuse of civility, then expanding the meaning of civility, and finally offering applied examples of civility. Civility bears its participants to utopia. Such utopia has many forms: (...)
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