Results for 'Civics History.'

980 found
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  1.  3
    History, Geography and Civics: Teaching and Learning in the Primary Years.John Buchanan - 2013 - Cambridge University Press.
    History, Geography and Civics provides an in-depth and engaging introduction to teaching and learning socio-environmental education from F-6 in Australia and New Zealand. It explores the centrality of socio-environmental issues to all aspects of life and education and makes explicit links between pedagogical theories and classroom activities. Part I introduces readers to teaching and learning history, geography and environmental studies, and civics and citizenship, as well as issues in intercultural and global education. Part II explores the use of (...)
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  2.  3
    Natural history societies in late Victorian Scotland and the pursuit of local civic science.Diarmid A. Finnegan - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Science 38 (1):53-72.
    Nineteenth-century natural history societies sought to address the concerns of a scientific and a local public. Focusing on natural history societies in late Victorian Scotland, this paper concentrates on the relations between associational natural history and local civic culture. By examining the recruitment rhetoric used by leading members and by exploring the public meetings organized by the societies, the paper signals a number of ways in which members worked to make their societies important public bodies in Scottish towns. In addition, (...)
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  3. Signing on: A Contractarian Understanding of How Public History is Used for Civic Inclusion.Daniel Abrahams - 2023 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 26 (5):651-665.
    What makes public history more than just another hill to fight over in culture war politics? In this paper I propose a novel way of understanding the political significance of how public history creates and shapes identities: a contractarian one. I argue that public history can be sensibly understood as representing groups as a society’s contracting parties. One particular value of the contractarian approach is that it helps to elucidate the phenomenon of “signing on,” where a marginalized or oppressed group (...)
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  4.  22
    German History 1800-1866. Civic World and Strong State. [REVIEW]Helmut Altrichter - 1985 - Philosophy and History 18 (2):171-171.
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  5.  13
    Universities, the Humanities and Civic Life, c.1880–1930: A Pilot Study of the Manchester School of History.Stuart Jones & Christopher Godden - 2015 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 91 (1):113-114.
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  6. Mary Wollstonecraft and Adam Smith on gender, history, and the civic republican tradition.Neven Leddy - 2016 - In Geoffrey C. Kellow & Neven Leddy (eds.), On Civic Republicanism: Ancient Lessons for Global Politics. University of Toronto Press.
  7.  13
    Diarmid A. Finnegan, Natural History Societies and Civic Culture in Victorian Scotland. London: Pickering and Chatto, 2009. Pp. xi+254. ISBN 978-1-85196-658-5. £60.00 .Simon Naylor, Regionalizing Science: Placing Knowledges in Victorian England. London: Pickering and Chatto, 2010. Pp. xiv+245. ISBN 978-1-85196-636-3. £60.00. [REVIEW]Samuel Alberti - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Science 44 (2):294-296.
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  8.  16
    Making Civics Count: Citizenship Education for a New Generation.David E. Campbell, Meira Levinson & Frederick M. Hess (eds.) - 2012 - Harvard Education Press.
    "By nearly every measure, Americans are less engaged in their communities and political activity than generations past.” So write the editors of this volume, who survey the current practices and history of citizenship education in the United States. They argue that the current period of “creative destruction”—when schools are closing and opening in response to reform mandates—is an ideal time to take an in-depth look at how successful strategies and programs promote civic education and good citizenship. _Making Civics Count_ (...)
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  9.  37
    Civic Biology and the Origin of the School Antievolution Movement.Adam R. Shapiro - 2008 - Journal of the History of Biology 41 (3):409 - 433.
    In discussing the origins of the antievolution movement in American high schools within the framework of science and religion, much is overlooked about the influence of educational trends in shaping this phenomenon. This was especially true in the years before the 1925 Scopes trial, the beginnings of the school antievolution movement. There was no sudden realization in the 1920's – sixty years after the "Origin of Species" was published – that Darwinism conflicted with the Bible, but until evolution was being (...)
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  10. Civic Action Against Son Preference in Tirupati, India: Critical International Law Put into Practice?Filip Strandberg Hassellind - 2023 - Law and Critique 35 (1):125-147.
    In this paper based on original fieldwork, I seek to contribute to critical scholarship in international law by providing an investigation into the engagement with international law by actors in civil society working against son preference primarily in Tirupati, India. I suggest that the turn to the international legal order by civic actors should be theorized as something else than as merely coming ‘from above’, ‘from below’ or as a ‘translation’ of ‘global’ law to ‘local’ conditions. Instead, I propose that (...)
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  11.  10
    Humanities & Civic Life: Volume 32.Gabriel R. Ricci & Paul Gottfried - 2002 - Routledge.
    "This volume in Religion and Public Life, a series on religion and public affairs, provides a wide-ranging forum for differing views on religious and ethical considerations. The contributions address the decline of social capital-those patterns of behavior which are conducive to self-governance and the spirit of self-reliance-and its relation to the demise of the civic-humanist tradition in American education. The unifying theme, is that classical studies do not merely result in individual mastery over a particular technique or body of knowledge, (...)
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  12. Book Review of Civic Ideals: Conflicting Visions of Citizenship in US History by Rogers M. Smith. [REVIEW]Ira Katznelson - 1999 - Political Theory 4:565-70.
     
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  13.  5
    Review of Civic Ideals: Conflicting Visions of Citizenship in US History. [REVIEW]Ira Katznelson - 1999 - Political Theory 27 (4):568.
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  14.  6
    Civic justice: from Greek antiquity to the modern world.Peter Murphy - 2001 - Amherst, N.Y.: Humanity Books.
  15.  16
    Digital Civics and Nomos: Response to Digital Civics and Algorithmic Citizenship in a Global Scenario.Estelle Clements - 2023 - Philosophy and Technology 36 (3):1-4.
    This commentary response presents two concepts that may address legal-political issues arising in the civics pillar of digital civics: the history of data and nomos. It suggests that we can draw from the history of data to supplement our understanding of datafication and formulate responses to surveillance capitalism. It then forwards the utility of the ancient concept of nomos as a means of approaching cultural and jurisdictional challenges arising in the infosphere.
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  16.  31
    Authentic Civic Attitude.Artur Szutta - 2012 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 86 (2):293-318.
    The article concerns the question of civic virtues, the aim being to present and argue for the personalist conception of citizenship. It consists of four parts. Inthe first part, following Will Kymlicka, I argue for the need of active citizenship; my claim is that personalism offers an attractive concept of such attitude. In thesecond part I make an outline of the personalist idea of authentic community, including the idea of authentic political community, and thus set the necessaryconceptual context for further (...)
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  17.  40
    A Politically Liberal Conception of Civic Education.Barry L. Bull - 2008 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 27 (6):449-460.
    Liberal political theory is widely believed to be an inadequate source of civic commitment and thus of civic education primarily because of its commitment to what is perceived as a pervasive individualism. In this paper, I explore the possibility that John Rawls’s later political philosophy may provide a response to this belief. I first articulate a conception of liberal politics derived from Rawls’s idea of reflective equilibrium that generates an overlapping consensus about political principles among those who hold a wide (...)
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  18.  11
    Civic Personae: Macintyre, Cicero and moral personality.D. Burchell - 1998 - History of Political Thought 19 (1):101-118.
    Alisdair ManIntyre's well-known criticism of modern moral philosophy contrasts what he sees as the moral vacuity of modern culture with a ‘classical tradition' in ethical thought depicted as restoring cohesion and coherence to social striving and ethical life. MacIntyre's stress on the culturally specific circumstances within which ethical imperatives derive their force provides a corrective to unworldly tendancies within post-Kantian moral philosophy, yet his ‘classical’ ethical landscape possesses an equally striking kind of unworldliness. His image of a life lived as (...)
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  19.  38
    Florentine civic humanism and the emergence of modern ideology.Hanan Yoran - 2007 - History and Theory 46 (3):326–344.
    This article revisits the question of the modernity of the Renaissance by examining the political language of Florentine civic humanism and by critically analyzing the debate over Hans Baron’s interpretation of the movement. It engages two debates that are usually conducted separately: one concerning the originality of civic humanism in comparison to medieval thought, and the other concerning the political and social function of the civic humanists’ political republicanism in fifteenth-century Florence. The article’s main contention is that humanist political discourse (...)
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  20.  7
    Do As I Say and As I Do: Lessons on the Use of History for the Civic Statesman in Plutarch’s Praecepta.Kristine M. Trego - 2016 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 109 (3):357-379.
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  21. The Great Dionysia and civic ideology.Simon Goldhill - 1987 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 107:58-76.
    There have been numerous attempts to understand the role and importance of the Great Dionysia in Athens, and it is a festival that has been made crucial to varied and important characterizations of Greek culture as well as the history of drama or literature. Recent scholarship, however, has greatly extended our understanding of the formation of fifth-century Athenian ideology—in the sense of the structure of attitudes and norms of behaviour—and this developing interest in what might be called a ‘civic discourse’ (...)
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  22.  17
    The civic humanist portrait of Machiavelli's English successors.Vickie Sullivan - 1994 - History of Political Thought 15 (1):73-96.
    Because a thorough investigation of Machiavelli's thought and the thought of those who explicitly drew on it can be achieved only through the kind of Herculean labours displayed by Pocock in his Machiavellian Moment, I propose here to examine only two works by admirers of Machiavelli: Harrington's Oceana, which imports the Italian Renaissance to England's shores, and John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon's Cato's Letters, which prepares its departure for America. I argue that a re-examination of these critical links in the (...)
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  23.  34
    Social science as civic discourse: essays on the invention, legitimation, and uses of social theory.Richard Harvey Brown - 1989 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Richard Harvey Brown's pioneering explorations in the philosophy of social science and the theory of rhetoric reach a culmination in Social Science as Civic Discourse. In his earlier works, he argued for a logic of discovery and explanation in social science by showing that science and art both depend on metaphoric thinking, and he has applied that logic to society as a narrative text in which significant action by moral agents is possible. This new work is at once a philosophical (...)
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  24.  34
    The Challenge of Developing Civic Engagement in Higher Education in England.John Annette - 2010 - British Journal of Educational Studies 58 (4):451-463.
    This paper explores how civic engagement as an important dimension of public engagement in higher education has been slow to develop in the UK, despite an important history dating from the ‘civic universities' in the ninetheenth century. I specifically consider the development of ' service learning ' as an important way in which the values and practices of democratic citizenship can be embedded in the curriculum of higher education. Finally, I examine how the decline of the ideal of ‘public service' (...)
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  25. Nicholas Terpstra, Lay Confraternities and Civic Religion in Renaissance Bologna. (Cambridge Studies in Italian History and Culture.) Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1995. Pp. xx, 251; black-and-white figures and tables. $59.95. [REVIEW]Daniel Bornstein - 1998 - Speculum 73 (2):605-607.
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  26.  18
    From civic institution to community place: the meaning of the public market in modern America.Nancy B. Kurland & Linda S. Aleci - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (3):505-521.
    This paper examines the discursive transformation of the historic American public market from that of a municipally regulated institution intended to ensure fair trade and equitable food distribution to “a public place” that emphasizes community identity and sociability. Using a semiotic analysis of interviews with 31 market managers of 30 historic and contemporary American public markets, data from historic documents, and multiple site visits, we compare the social construction of the contemporary public market to farmers markets, supermarkets, and the early (...)
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  27.  12
    Civic religion and national fetes in ritual and music: The combination of a european idea with indigenous traditions, illustrating the priority of music over politics.Conrad Louis Donakowski - 1993 - History of European Ideas 16 (4-6):697-704.
  28.  51
    National, Ethnic or Civic? Contesting Paradigms of Memory, Identity and Culture in Israel.Uri Ram - 2000 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 19 (5/6):405-422.
    Zionist national identity in Israel is today challenged by two mutuallyantagonistic alternatives: a liberal, secular, Post-Zionist civic identity, on the one hand, and ethnic, religious, Neo-Zionist nationalistic identity, on the other. The other, Zionist, hegemony contains an unsolvable tension between the national and the democratic facets of the state. The Post-Zionist trend seeks a relief of this tension by bracketing the nationalcharacter of the state, i.e., by separation of state and cultural community/ies; the Neo-Zionist trend seeks a relief of the (...)
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  29.  17
    Humanist, Civic Education and Attitude in Gilberto Monteiro.Margarida Barahona Simões - 2008 - Cultura:57-76.
    Gilberto Monteiro foi médico municipal da freguesia de Carnaxide de 1921 a 1961, Chefe dos Serviços Clínicos da extinta fábrica dos Fermentos Holandeses (F.P.F.H.), sediada na Cruz Quebrada, de 1934 a 1962 e, durante a II Guerrra Mundial, exerceu no Hospital Militar de Belém, na qualidade de tenente médico miliciano. Amante do desporto e desportista, G. Monteiro foi um dos fundadores do Sport Algés e Dafundo (SAD), instituição onde, enquanto membro da sua primeira Comissão Cultural, criou a Biblioteca, organizou conferências, (...)
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  30.  25
    Έπιτηδευμα or Civic Vocation in Plato's "Republic".David J. Hassel - 1964 - Modern Schoolman 41 (3):251-261.
  31.  24
    Έπιτηδευμα or Civic Vocation in Plato's "Republic".David J. Hassel - 1964 - Modern Schoolman 41 (2):145-157.
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  32.  20
    Touchy subject: the history and philosophy of sex education.Lauren Bialystok - 2022 - London: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Lisa M. F. Andersen.
    In the United States, sex education is more than just an uncomfortable rite of passage, it's an amorphous curriculum that varies widely based on the politics, experience, resources, and biases of the people teaching it. Most often, it's a train wreck, overemphasizing or underemphasizing STIs, teen pregnancy, abstinence, and consent. In Touchy Subject, philosopher Lauren Bialystok and historian Lisa M. F. Andersen make the case for thoughtful sex education, explaining why it's worth fighting for and which kind most deserves our (...)
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  33.  18
    Civic Associations, Political Parties, and the Cultivation of Citizenship Consciousness in Modern China.Liu Zehua & Liu Jianqing - 1996 - Chinese Studies in History 29 (4):8-35.
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  34.  30
    Civic Virtue.Michael P. Krom - 2014 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 88:145-153.
    This paper articulates Aquinas’s account of the duties citizens have toward the nation, focused specifically on the virtues of piety and observance. In the first section, I discuss justice as the foundation of good citizenship. In the second, I delineate the acts of justice which primarily orient citizens toward serving the nation, focusing specifically on piety and observance. Finally, in the third section I reflect on how religion, or the virtue by which humans render proper worship to God, has a (...)
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  35.  23
    Learning from Examples of Civic Responsibility: What Community-Based Art Centers Teach Us about Arts Education.Jessica Hoffmann Davis - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 44 (3):82.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Learning from Examples of Civic Responsibility:What Community-Based Art Centers Teach Us about Arts EducationJessica Hoffmann Davis (bio)Introduction/QuestionThroughout the United States, beyond school walls, there struggles and soars a sprawling field of community art centers dedicated to education.1 Most frequently clustered on either coast in bustling urban communities, these centers provide arts training that enriches or exceeds what is offered in schools. They serve artists who need space for work (...)
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  36. The Civic Responsibilities of Historians.Jean-Noel Jeanneney - 2008 - Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 43 (4):31.
  37.  22
    Integrations: The Struggle for Racial Equality and Civic Renewal in Public Schools (2021).Lawrence Blum & Zoë Burkholder - 2021 - Chicago: University of Chicago.
    The promise of a free, high-quality public education is supposed to guarantee every child a shot at the American dream. But our widely segregated schools mean that many children of color do not have access to educational opportunities equal to those of their white peers. In Integrations, historian Zoë Burkholder and philosopher Lawrence Blum investigate what this country’s long history of school segregation means for achieving just and equitable educational opportunities in the United States. Integrations focuses on multiple marginalized groups (...)
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  38. Civility and Civic Culture in Early Modern England: The Meanings of Urban Freedom.Jonathan Barry - 2000 - In Peter Burke & Brian Harrison (eds.), Civil Histories: Essays Presented to Sir Keith Thomas. Oxford University Press.
  39.  42
    Legal Vices and Civic Virtue: Vice Crimes, Republicanism and the Corruption of Lawfulness. [REVIEW]Ekow N. Yankah - 2013 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 7 (1):61-82.
    Vice crimes, crimes prohibited in part because they are viewed as morally corrupting, engage legal theorists because they reveal importantly contrasting views between liberals and virtue-centered theorists on the very limits of legitimate state action. Yet advocates and opponents alike focus on the role law can play in suppressing personal vice; the role of law is seen as suppressing licentiousness, sloth, greed etc. The most powerful advocates of the position that the law must nurture good character often draw on Aristotelian (...)
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  40. Corrupting the youth: a history of philosophy in Australia.James Franklin - 2003 - Sydney, Australia: Macleay Press.
    A polemical account of Australian philosophy up to 2003, emphasising its unique aspects (such as commitment to realism) and the connections between philosophers' views and their lives. Topics include early idealism, the dominance of John Anderson in Sydney, the Orr case, Catholic scholasticism, Melbourne Wittgensteinianism, philosophy of science, the Sydney disturbances of the 1970s, Francofeminism, environmental philosophy, the philosophy of law and Mabo, ethics and Peter Singer. Realist theories especially praised are David Armstrong's on universals, David Stove's on logical probability (...)
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  41.  12
    Moral and civic education – the hidden curriculum in Macau.Chan Chi-hou - 2004 - Journal of Moral Education 33 (4):553-573.
    Macau, as a society, is a crossroads where East–West encounters have been taking place for centuries. This paper examines some of the contemporary issues and implications for moral education. After a brief introduction to the social background of Macau, the paper describes the characteristics of Macau's education in general and the development of its moral education in particular. This has taken place in the context of the strong influences on morality of both Catholicism and Confucianism. An outline of the current (...)
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  42.  4
    Ethics of civic virtues in Polish tradition and modernity.Ryszard Wiśniewski - 2022 - Philosophical Discourses 4:53-72.
    The article is an attempt to indicate the presence of the ethics of civic virtues in Polish ethics, both old and modern, which is worth in-depth attention. Problems of civic morality have constantly accompanied ethics and morality in Poland since the Renaissance. Its content was usually a reflection of critical reflection on the defects of civic morality, especially of the nobility, and over time of the bourgeoisie, and at the same time it was normatively constructive as historical and political changes (...)
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  43.  5
    Catholics, science and civic culture in Victorian Belfast.Diarmid A. Finnegan & Jonathan Jeffrey Wright - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Science 48 (2):261-287.
    The connections between science and civic culture in the Victorian period have been extensively, and intensively, investigated over the past several decades. Limited attention, however, has been paid to Irish urban contexts. Roman Catholic attitudes towards science in the nineteenth century have also been neglected beyond a rather restricted set of thinkers and topics. This paper is offered as a contribution to addressing these lacunae, and examines in detail the complexities involved in Catholic engagement with science in Victorian Belfast. The (...)
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  44.  36
    Solidarity: From Civic Friendship to a Global Legal Community.Jeffrey Flynn (ed.) - 2005 - MIT Press.
    In Solidarity, Hauke Brunkhorst brings a powerful combination of theoretical perspectives to bear on the concept of "democratic solidarity," the bond among free and equal citizens. Drawing on the disciplines of history, political philosophy, and political sociology, Brunkhorst traces the historical development of the idea of universal, egalitarian citizenship and analyzes the prospects for democratic solidarity at the international level, within a global community under law. His historical account of the concept outlines its development out of, and its departure from, (...)
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  45.  26
    Solidarity: From Civic Friendship to a Global Legal Community (review).Paul Hendrickson - 2006 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 39 (4):343-346.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Solidarity: From Civic Friendship to a Global Legal CommunityPaul HendricksonThe University of South Carolina. Hauke Brunkhorst. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2005. Pp. xxv + 262. $42.50, hardcover.Public appeals to solidarity have been pervasive throughout the storied history of political dissent and democratic politics. From the French Revolution and the European revolutions of 1848 to decolonization, Polish Solidarność, and the antiglobalization movement, solidarity has been invoked as a means of (...)
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  46.  9
    Liberal constitution, civic enlightenment, and colonies: Jeremy Bentham on the Spanish empire.Brian Chien-Kang Chen - 2024 - History of European Ideas 50 (2):228-248.
    ABSTRACT Between April 1820 and April 1822, stimulated by the restoration of the Cádiz Constitution, Bentham devoted himself to writing a number of works on the constitutional reform and colonial rule of Spain, which have been sources of a scholarly debate over Bentham's views on colony. By examining those works, this essay aims to supplement the scholarly debate by drawing attention to a thesis that Bentham developed in his criticism and evaluation of the Cádiz Constitution: a thesis concerning the irreconcilable (...)
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  47.  22
    Juliana Adelman. Communities of Science in Nineteenth-Century Ireland. xi + 221 pp., bibl., index. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2009. $99 .Diarmid A. Finnegan. Natural History Societies and Civic Culture in Victorian Scotland. xi + 254 pp., bibl., index. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2009. $99. [REVIEW]Richard A. Jarrell - 2011 - Isis 102 (1):171-173.
  48.  10
    Moral Foundations, Shared Civic Projects and Rossi’s Kant.Sarah Holtman - 2021 - Philosophia 49 (5):1875-1885.
    Although I quickly review Philip Rossi’s larger argument in The Ethical Commonwealth in History, my focus in this article is on the implications of Rossi’s work for our characterizations of justice and citizenship on a Kantian account. For in arguing that a wise reading of Kant’s political theory allows us better to grasp his overarching aims, Rossi provides convincing evidence for a pair of challenges to the currently popular interpretation of that theory. These address the relationship between Kant’s moral and (...)
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  49.  28
    In Search of a Civic Union: The Political Theme of European Democracy and its Primordial Foundation in Greek Philosophy.Manfred Riedel - 1985 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 10 (2):101-112.
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  50. In Search of a Civic Union: The Political Theme of European Democracy and its Primordial Foundation in Greek Philosophy.Manfred Riedel - 1985 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 10 (2):101-112.
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