Avoiding the Whiff of Paradox in the Liberal Promotion of Autonomy

Journal of Philosophical Research 37:221-232 (2012)
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Abstract

In his recent articulation and defense of what he calls autonomy-minded anti-perfectionism, Ben Colburn relies on a distinction he draws between first-order and second-order values. In this paper I argue that his approach (1) fails to make good on its promise to offer a distinct third way, (2) is either too restrictive or too permissive and (3) relies crucially on a kind of formal analysis that undercuts the central claim upon which rests his unification of neutrality-minded (“political”) and perfectionistic (“comprehensive”) liberalism.

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John Rudisill
College of Wooster

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