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  1. Violent Attachments.Hagar Kotef - 2020 - Political Theory 48 (1):4-29.
    Drawing on feminist and queer critiques that see violence as constitutive of identities, this essay points to subject-positions whose construction is necessarily conditioned by exercising violence. Focusing on settler colonialism, I reverse the optics of the first set of critiques: rather than seeing the self as taking form through the injuries she suffers, I try to understand selves that are structurally constituted by causing injury to others. This analysis refuses the assumption that violence is in conflict with identity, and that, (...)
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  • Politics, Innocence, and the Limits of Goodness.Peter Johnson - 1988 - Philosophy 64 (249):421-423.
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  • Innocence.Elizabeth Wolgast - 1993 - Philosophy 68 (265):297 - 307.
    Of all moral conditions, innocence seems easily the best and most desirable, for it means the complete absence of error and regret and all the anxieties that go with these—anxieties about avoiding guilt and making amends for instance. Against the background of guilt and traffic with wrong, innocence is indisputably better, just as something clean is better than something soiled, something fresh better than something stale.
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  • Beyond Good and Evil.Friedrich Nietzsche & Helen Zimmern - 1908 - International Journal of Ethics 18 (4):517-518.
     
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  • The Community of Those Who Have Nothing in Common.Alphonso Lingis - 1996 - The Personalist Forum 12 (2):186-187.
     
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