Results for ' political conceptions'

996 found
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  1.  61
    Prelude to a Theory of Musical Representation.Brandon Polite - 2017 - Revista Música 17 (1):89-108.
    In this paper, I present the beginnings of a resemblance theory of representation. I start by surveying the contemporary philosophical debate surrounding musical representation and reveal that its main interlocutors share a conception of artistic representation as a mode of meaningful communication. I then show how conceiving of artistic representation in this way severely limits music’s possibilities as a medium for representation. Next, I propose an alternative conception of representation that, despite its widespread acceptance outside of the philosophy of art, (...)
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  2.  10
    Tortured Calculations: Body Economies in Shakespeare's Cultures of Honor.Brandon Polite - 2011 - Selected Papers of the Ohio Valley Shakespeare Conference 4:68-79.
    In this paper, I explore the ways in which human bodies, payback, and comestibility become inescapably entangled in cultures in which honor is the prevailing virtue. Shakespeare was deeply sensitive to the social and psychological processes through which these concepts become entwined when honor is at stake—to the ways in which, as a means of corrective response, men who transgress a code of honor can be rightly reduced to their bodies, similar to how those who are not allowed to be (...)
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  3.  8
    Krytyka artystyczna dwudziestolecia międzywojennego. Między estetyką filozoficzną i sztuką nowoczesną.Agnieszka Rejniak-Majewska & Paweł Polit - 2020 - Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Philosophica. Ethica-Aesthetica-Practica 36:7-12.
    By the late 1920s in Europe new art directions were regarded as already completed phenomena, a part of “avant-garde tradition.” Such views were expressed by Jean Arp and El Lissitzky’s in their book Kuntismen, and by Amédée Ozenfant’s in Art. Bilan des arts modernes en France. Similar opinions were also voiced by Jan Brzękowski, a Polish poet and critic, who regarded this time as a period of “establishing certain values” rather than new breakthroughs. In this article I discuss Brzękowski’s strategies (...)
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  4. Political Conceptions of Human Rights and Corporate Responsibility.Daniel P. Corrigan - 2017 - In Reidar Maliks & Johan Karlsson Schaffer (eds.), Moral and Political Conceptions of Human Rights: Implications for Theory and Practice. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 229-257.
    Does a political conception of human rights dictate a particular view of corporate human rights obligations? The U.N. “Protect, Respect, and Remedy” Framework and Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights hold that corporations have only a responsibility to respect human rights. Some critics have argued that corporations should be responsible for a wider range of human rights obligations, beyond merely an obligation to respect such rights. Furthermore, it has been argued that the Framework relied on a political (...)
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  5. Toward a political conception of human rights.Kenneth Baynes - 2009 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 35 (4):371-390.
    Human rights have become a wider and more visible feature of our political discourse, yet many have also noted the great discrepancy between the human rights invoked in this discourse and traditional philosophical accounts that conceive of human rights as natural rights. This article explores an alternative approach in which human rights are conceived primarily as international norms aimed at securing the basic conditions of membership or inclusion in a political society. Central to this `political conception' of (...)
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  6.  15
    The Political Conception of Human Rights and Its Rule(s) of Recognition.Andre Santos Campos - 2022 - Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 35 (1):95-116.
    The political conception makes sense of human rights strictly in light of their role in international human rights practice, more specifically by describing how they justify interventions against states that engage in or fail to prevent human rights violations. This conception is, therefore, normative and fact-dependent. Beyond this, it does not seem to have much to say about the actual nature of international human rights practice. The argument sustained here reinterprets the political conception by resorting to a heuristic (...)
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  7. Political Concepts: A Reconstruction.Felix E. Oppenheim - 1981 - Philosophical Review 92 (2):249-252.
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  8.  13
    The Political Conception of Person and the Constitutive Visions of the Good.Luis Villavicencio - 2007 - Ideas Y Valores 56 (135):29–49.
    This article analyzes whether the strategy displayed by Rawls startingwith the Dewey Lectures makes it possible to overcome the comprehensive character that some critics attribute to his political conception of person. After describing said conception, the paper reviews the objection that it is incompatible with those conceptions of the good that attribute a constitutive character to attachments and ends. Finally, it is concluded that although the distinction between political and comprehensive liberalism is unstable, it is compatible with (...)
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  9.  95
    Political concepts and ideological morphology.Michael Freeden - 1994 - Journal of Political Philosophy 2 (2):140–164.
  10.  18
    Redescribing political concepts: History of concepts and politics.Sandro Chignola - 2005 - Contributions to the History of Concepts 1 (2):245-251.
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  11.  4
    Military-political concept in Islam.Islyam Gimadutin - 2004 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 31:28-42.
    One of the big problems Muslims have to face in Ukraine today is the escalation of a negative atmosphere around them related to the issue of terrorism. Very often, the media provide information about Islam to a frightening population, incorrectly setting out the issues of Islamic dogma associated with such a concept as jihad.
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  12. Is a Political Conception of “Overlapping Consensus” an Adequate Basis for Global Justice?Karl-Otto Apel - 2001 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 11:1-15.
    This paper considers how the problem of justice is to be globalized in the political theory of John Rawls. I discuss first the conception of “overlapping consensus” as an innovation in Rawls’s Political Liberalism and point out the recurrence of the problem of a philosophical foundation in his pragmatico-political interpretation. I suggest an intensification of Rawls’s notion of the “priority of the right to the good” as a philosophical correction to his political self-interpretation, and then finally (...)
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  13.  15
    Basic political concepts.J. Srzednicki - 1963 - Philosophical Quarterly 13 (52):229-237.
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  14.  10
    Political Conception of Justice and Overlapping Consensus—On Rawls’ View of Justice.余 余 - 2022 - Advances in Philosophy 11 (5):1299.
  15.  10
    Political Concepts.Maria T. Wolf - 1984 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 30:376-376.
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  16. Discourse ethics and the political conception of human rights.Kenneth Baynes - 2009 - Ethics and Global Politics 2 (1).
    This article examines two recent alternatives to the traditional conception of human rights as natural rights: the account of human rights found in discourse ethics and the ‘political conception’ of human rights influenced by the work of Rawls. I argue that both accounts have distinct merits and that they are not as opposed to one another as is sometimes supposed. At the same time, the discourse ethics account must confront a deep ambiguity in its own approach: are rights derived (...)
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  17.  20
    Political Concepts.Dudley Knowles - 2005 - Contemporary Political Theory 4 (1):87-90.
  18.  56
    Precarity as a Political Concept, or, Fordism as Exception.Brett Neilson & Ned Rossiter - 2008 - Theory, Culture and Society 25 (7-8):51-72.
    In 2003, the concept of precarity emerged as the central organizing platform for a series of social struggles that would spread across the space of Europe. Four years later, almost as suddenly as the precarity movement appeared, so it would enter into crisis. To understand precarity as a political concept it is necessary to go beyond economistic approaches that see social conditions as determined by the mode of production. Such a move requires us to see Fordism as exception and (...)
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  19.  78
    A Family of Political Concepts.Melvin Richter - 2005 - European Journal of Political Theory 4 (3):221-248.
    It has been argued recently that tyranny is a persisting phenomenon very much alive today, a greater danger than newer forms of misrule such as totalitarianism. One argument is based on human nature being such that the temptation to abuse political power in the form of tyranny remains a possibility in all societies. Another defines tyranny as a spiritual disorder of the soul and polity. Both date the 19th century as the time when tyranny dropped out of the western (...)
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  20. Dante's Political Conception.Barbara Barclay Carter - 1936 - Hibbert Journal 35:568-579.
     
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  21.  2
    The failure of the political concept of the person? : a Foucaultian-Arendtian response to Roberto Esposito.Antonio Calcagno - 2018 - In Inna Viriasova (ed.), Roberto Esposito: biopolitics and philosophy. Albany, NY: SUNY. pp. 127-142.
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  22.  5
    Mind and Political Concepts.Ezra Talmor - 2016 - Elsevier.
    Mind and Political Concepts offers a descriptive account of the conceptual mind as applied to political philosophy. In an attempt to find the common feature characterizing the conceptual method in political philosophy, this book examines three classical works: Plato's Republic, Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Social Contract. It argues that political philosophy can also contribute something to philosophical psychology. This book is comprised of six chapters and begins by tracing the origins of the conceptual method (...)
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  23.  6
    Natural and Political Conceptions of Community: The Role of the Household Society in Early Modern Jesuit Thought, C.1590–1650.Christoph Philipp Haar - 2018 - Brill.
    _Natural and Political Conceptions of Community_ demonstrates how the early modern Jesuits recruited the household community when reflecting on the political community, integrating an account of human nature with a notion of politics as the sphere of law, rights, and virtues.
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  24.  13
    The Ruling Ideas: Bourgeois Political Concepts.Amy E. Wendling - 2012 - Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books.
    The concepts that organize our thinking wield, by virtue of this fact, a great deal of political power. This book looks at five concepts whose dominion has increased, steadily, during the bourgeois period of modernity: Labor, Time, Property, Value, and Crisis. These ruling ideas are central not only to many academic disciplines— from philosophy and law to the political, social, and economic sciences— but also to everyday life.
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  25.  72
    Towards a Transformational Political Concept of Love in Critical Education.Maija Lanas & Michalinos Zembylas - 2014 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 34 (1):31-44.
    This paper makes a case for love as a powerful force for ‘transforming power’ in our educational institutions and everyday lives, and proposes that ‘revolutionary love’ serves as a moral and strategic compass for concrete individual and collective actions in critical education. The paper begins by reviewing current conceptualizations of love in critical education and identifies the potential for further theorization of the concept of love. It continues by theorizing love as a transformational political concept, focusing on six different (...)
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  26.  9
    On the New-Old Political Concepts: Re-Conceptualizing and Expanding the Views in Studying Politics Following the Impact of Globalization.Veton Latifi - 2019 - Seeu Review 14 (2):94-113.
    The article deals with the differences of pre-global and post-global conceptualizations in political sciences. It investigates the functions of political concepts under the changes globalization caused to political systems, culture and ideology. The paper does not engage with the methodological debates on political concepts, or question the undeniable importance of certain political concepts, but rather it addresses some of the principal concepts for which globalization may be a useful concept with regard to their similarities and (...)
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  27.  44
    The State of the Political: Conceptions of Politics and the State in the Thought of Max Weber, Carl Schmitt, and Franz Neumann.Duncan Kelly - 2003 - Oup/British Academy.
    The State of the Political challenges traditional interpretations of the political thought of Max Weber, Carl Schmitt, and Franz Neumann. Focusing on their adaptation of a German tradition of state-legal theory, the book offers a scholarly, contextualized account of the interrelationship between their political thought and practical political criticism. Dr Kelly criticizes the typical separation of these writers, and offers a substantial reinterpretation of modern German political thought in a period of profound transition, in particular (...)
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  28.  20
    Τύραννος. The Semantics of a Political Concept from Archilochus to Aristotle.Victor Parker - 1998 - Hermes 126 (2):45-72.
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  29.  13
    Moral and Political Conceptions of Human Rights: Implications for Theory and Practice.Reidar Maliks & Johan Karlsson Schaffer (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In recent years, political philosophers have debated whether human rights are a special class of moral rights we all possess simply by virtue of our common humanity and which are universal in time and space, or whether they are essentially modern political constructs defined by the role they play in an international legal-political practice that regulates the relationship between the governments of sovereign states and their citizens. This edited volume sets out to further this debate and move (...)
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  30.  6
    The State of the Political: Conceptions of Politics and the State in the Thought.Duncan Kelly - 2003 - Oxford University Press UK.
    The State of the Political offers a broad-ranging re-interpretation of the understanding of politics and the state in the writings of three major German thinkers, Max Weber, Carl Schmitt, and Franz Neumann. It rejects the typical separation of these writers on the basis of their allegedly incompatible ideological positions, and suggests instead that once properly located in their historical context, the tendentious character of these interpretative boundaries becomes clear.The book interprets the conceptions of politics and the state in (...)
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  31.  2
    Love as Political Concept.Marc De Kesel - 2013 - Philosophy, Culture, and Traditions 9:87-104.
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  32.  32
    Political Concepts. [REVIEW]Maria T. Wolf - 1984 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 30:376-376.
  33.  13
    Political Concepts. [REVIEW]Maria T. Wolf - 1984 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 30:376-376.
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  34.  24
    Political Concepts--A Reconstruction. [REVIEW]L. M. W. - 1982 - Review of Metaphysics 35 (4):893-894.
    Oppenheim is, so to speak an unreconstructed reconstructionist, maintaining the ideal of a relatively perspicuous, non-normative social scientific language-"neither wholly reportative nor merely stipulative, but explicative" --against the tide of contemporary criticisms of "positivism" in this domain. While denying that he himself is a positivist in the sense employed by the critics, he defends a number of the ideas that have often been associated with that term in the philosophy of the social sciences, in particular that of the separability of (...)
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  35.  13
    Compatibilism and a Political Conception of Autonomy.Daniel Sharp & David Wasserman - 2013 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 4 (4):55-56.
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  36.  2
    Political Concepts: A Reconstruction. [REVIEW]Diana T. Meyers - 1983 - Philosophical Review 92 (2):249-252.
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  37.  10
    The Foundation of the Juridico-Political: Concept Formation in Hans Kelsen and Max Weber.Ian Bryan, Peter Langford & John McGarry (eds.) - 2015 - New York: Routledge.
    Hans Kelsen and Max Weber are conventionally understood as initiators not only of two distinct and opposing processes of concept formation, but also of two discrete and contrasting theoretical frameworks for the study of law. _The Foundation of the Juridical-Political: Concept Formation in Hans Kelsen and Max Weber _places the conventional understanding of the theoretical relationship between the work of Kelsen and Weber into question. Focusing on the theoretical foundations of Kelsen’s legal positivism and Weber’s sociology of law, and (...)
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  38. History of political thought and the history of political concepts: Koselleck's proposal and Italian research.C. Chignola - 2002 - History of Political Thought 23 (3):517-541.
    The article analyses different forms of the theoretical paradigm of German Begriffsgeschichte. It focuses on the coherently formalized proposal made by Reinhard Koselleck, showing its relevance for the main Italian schools of interpretation. Koselleck is able to move beyond the historicist framework of Begriffsgeschichte on the basis of a theory of the Sattelzeit or Schwellenzeit--located between the eve of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century--capable of orienting the reconstruction of the history of political concepts. This presupposition, (...)
     
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  39.  25
    Virtus as a Political Concept in the Middle Ages.Silke Schwandt - 2015 - Contributions to the History of Concepts 10 (2):71-90.
  40.  5
    A new political concept for Sri Lanka.Ran Banda Seneviratne - 1999 - Nugegoda: Friends of Nrw [sic] Direction.
  41. Isocratia as a Political Concept (Herodotus, 5.92 a. 1).M. Ostwald - 1972 - In Richard Walzer, S. M. Stern, Albert Habib Hourani & Vivian Brown (eds.), Islamic Philosophy and the Classical Tradition. Columbia, University of South Carolina Press. pp. 277--91.
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  42.  4
    Fundamental religio-political concepts in the sources of Islam.Souran Mardini - 2012 - Turkey: Murat Print Center.
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  43.  11
    Rawls, Associations, and the Political Conception of Justice.Marilyn Fischer - 1997 - Journal of Social Philosophy 28 (3):31-42.
  44. Felix Oppenheim, Political Concepts Reviewed by.Robert F. Ladenson - 1985 - Philosophy in Review 5 (2):74-76.
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  45.  9
    III.—Freedom and Modern Political Conceptions.G. H. Langley - 1937 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 37 (1):41-60.
  46.  12
    Legal and Political Concepts as Contextures.Dora Kostakopoulou - 2020 - Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy 49 (1):22-38.
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  47. Global warming and the cosmopolitan political conception of justice.Aaron Maltais - 2008 - Environmental Politics 17 (4):592-609.
    Within the literature in green political theory on global environmental threats one can often find dissatisfaction with liberal theories of justice. This is true even though liberal cosmopolitans regularly point to global environmental problems as one reason for expanding the scope of justice beyond the territorial limits of the state. One of the causes for scepticism towards liberal approaches is that many of the most notable anti-cosmopolitan theories are also advanced by liberals. In this paper, I first explain why (...)
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  48. Rawls’s notion of the political conception as educator.Steinar Bøyum - 2013 - European Journal of Political Theory 12 (2):136-152.
    This paper explores John Rawls’s strangely neglected notion, the political conception as educator, which captures how the public political culture can educate citizens. The aim is to elucidate both the idea itself and above all its function in Rawls’s Political Liberalism. After first surveying its main content and some historical parallels, the main body of the paper explores why Rawls places so much trust in the educative effect of institutions and, apparently, so little in schools. Along the (...)
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  49.  36
    Dworkin on the Semantics of Legal and Political Concepts.Dennis M. Patterson - 2006 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 26 (3):545-557.
    In a recent comment on H.L.A. Hart’s ‘Postscript’ to The Concept of Law, Ronald Dworkin claims that the meaning of legal and political concepts may be understood by analogy to the meaning of natural kind concepts like ‘tiger’, ‘gold’ and ‘water’. This article questions the efficacy of Dworkin’s claims by challenging the use of natural kinds as the basis for a semantic theory of legal and political concepts. Additionally, in matters of value there is no methodological equivalent to (...)
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  50. The narrow application of Rawls in business ethics: A political conception of both stakeholder theory and the morality of markets.Marc A. Cohen - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 97 (4):563-579.
    This paper argues that Rawls’ principles of justice provide a normative foundation for stakeholder theory. The principles articulate (at an abstract level) citizens’ rights; these rights create interests across all aspects of society, including in the space of economic activity; and therefore, stakeholders – as citizens – have legitimate interests in the space of economic activity. This approach to stakeholder theory suggests a political interpretation of Boatright’s Moral Market approach, one that emphasizes the rights/place of citizens. And this approach (...)
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