Dialogue 37 (4):867-870 (
1998)
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Abstract
This volume is for Rawls rather than about him or his philosophy. It collects essays by some of his students, testifying in endnotes to his inspiration as a teacher, but generally not reflecting on his major works. If the volume is about anything, it is about Kant’s moral philosophy, since eight of the fourteen essays address some aspect of it. But two have to do with Hobbes, two are on Rousseau, one on Aristotle, and one on Marx. The book shows yet again how the whole can be less than the sum of its parts. There are many fine essays here, but there is too little in the way of thematic unity, and, in one or two cases, there is the sort of scholarly backing and filling that, in the absence of supporting structure, is best left in the journals. Yet, most philosophical readers will find essays to relish.