archive

For a new political philosophy

John Thrasher (Arizona): Ordering Anarchy. Jon D. Carlson (UC-Merced): States of Nature: Consilience, Syncretism, and Challenges for Comparative Political Thought. Karl Widerquist (Georgetown-Qatar) and Grant McCall (Tulane): The Claims We Pass On: How Misconceptions about Prehistory Affect Modern Political Thought. Cormac S. Mac Amhlaigh (Edinburgh): Putting Political Constitutionalism in its Place. Alexander William Salter (Berry) and David J. Hebert (Ferris State): Tullock's Challenge: A Reconsideration of Constitutional Monarchy. Jeffrey L. Nicholas (Providence): Toward a Radical Integral Humanism: MacIntyre’s Continuing Marxism. Dotan Leshem (Columbia): The Martyr as the Vanishing Point for a New Political Philosophy. Elisabeth Anker (GW): The Liberalism of Horror. Cristian Timmermann (UNAM): Global Contributive Justice: An Exploration on How to Defend a Wider Provision of Meaningful Work. Axel Mueller (Northwestern): Against the (National or Cosmopolitan) Demos-fetish: On Habermas on Supranational Legitimacy. Joseph Heath (Toronto): Rebooting Discourse Ethics. Joseph Heath on areas where philosophers have simply written themselves out of any and all policy discussions, by abstracting away so many features of the real world that there is nothing left to prevent the adoption of extremist views. The introduction to Rationalism, Pluralism, and Freedom by Jacob T. Levy.