The Ethics of Political Violence
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Köp båda 2 för 2439 kr"Fiala explores the relation between the public and the private, the state and the individual, and war and peace with philosophical rigor and clarity. His writing is superb, and the views he defends demand to be taken seriously. This is an urgent and important contribution to our on-going attempts to understand the human conditiona condition marked as much by violence and atrocity as it is by acts of kindness and generosity." - J. Jeremy Wisnewski, Hartwick College, USA "The Enlightenment philosopher, Immanuel Kant, complained that the doctrine of justifiable war' provides little more than comfort to war-mongers. In this eloquent new essay, Andrew Fiala explores the dimensions of comfort' that our own Kantian convictions regarding the moral superiority of democracy and human rights provide when coupled with a grinding utilitarian logic' justifying the public use of deadly force in their furtherance. Surveying philosophical reflections on war from Plato, Kant, Bentham and Hegel to Hanna Arendt, John Rawls, and Michael Walzer, Fiala issues his own provocative challenges to our perpetual justification of our war-making and war-fighting, and examines, from Hiroshima to Baghdad, the private tragedy that war, as the sublime dance of cosmos and chaos', invariably reveals itself to be." - George R. Lucas, Jr., Class of 1984 Distinguished Chair of Ethics, U.S. Naval Academy, Professor of Philosophy and Public Policy, Naval Postgraduate School, USA 'This very readable work gives a valuable overview of philosophical attempts over the centuries to analyse war and how the state's logic of war is at odds with the moral logic of the individual' - Morning Star There is much to admire here, and Fiala's historical analysis of philosophical thinking about war is nuanced and interesting. -- Political Studies Review Vol. 10
Andrew Fiala is Professor of Philosophy at California State University, Fresno, USA. He is the author of The Just War Myth (Rowman and Littlefield, 2008), The Philosopher's Voice (SUNY Press, 2002) and Practical Pacifism (Algora Press, 2004).
Introduction; 1. The Sublime Grind of Ares; 2. The War of Public and Private; 3. Plato's Prophecy and Kant's Dream; 4. Democratic Control and Professional Ethics; 5. The Military Establishment; 6. The Democratic Peace Myth: From Kant and Mill to Hiroshima and Baghdad; 7. The Vanity of Temporal Things: Hegel and the Ethics of War; 8. American Ambivalence: Militarism, Pacificism and Pragmatism; 9. Sliding Scales and the Mischief of War; 10. Waterboarding, Torture and Violence; 11. Conscientious Refusal and the Liberal Tradition; 12. Public Myths and Private Protest; Bibliography; Index.