Autonomy, Freedom and Rights
A Critique of Liberal Subjectivity
Inbunden, Engelska, 2003
Del 65 i serien Law and Philosophy Library
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Beskrivning
Autonomy, viewed as a subject's autonomous designing of her own distinctive "individuality", is not a constitutive problem for liberal theory. Since its earliest formulations, liberalism has taken it for granted that protecting rights is a sufficient guarantee for the primacy of individual subjectivity. The most dangerous legacy of the "hierarchical-dualist" representation of the subject is the primacy given to reason in defining an individual's identity. For the author, freedom is not a fixed measure. It is not the container of powers and rights defining an individual's role and identity. It is rather the outcome of a process whereby individuals continuously re-define the shape of their individuality. Freedom is everything that each of us manages to be in his or her active and uncertain opposition to external "pressures".