Produktbild: Self-Evident Truths?

Self-Evident Truths? Human Rights and the Enlightenment (The Oxford Amnesty Lectures)

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

06.09.2012

Herausgeber

Kate E. Tunstall

Verlag

Bloomsbury

Seitenzahl

296

Maße (L/B/H)

21.6/14/1.6 cm

Gewicht

347 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4411-8524-2

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

06.09.2012

Herausgeber

Kate E. Tunstall

Verlag

Bloomsbury

Seitenzahl

296

Maße (L/B/H)

21.6/14/1.6 cm

Gewicht

347 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4411-8524-2

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  • Produktbild: Self-Evident Truths?
  • What Are the Oxford Amnesty Lectures?
    AcknowledgementsPreface
    Kate E. Tunstall (University of Oxford)

    Part I: Human Rights Today: an Enlightenment Legacy?
    Chapter OneRethinking Human Rights and Enlightenment: A View from the Twenty-First Century
    James Tully (University of Victoria)A Response to James TullyChristopher Brooke (University of Cambridge)
    Chapter Two"That the General Will is Indestructible": From a Citizen of Geneva to the Citizens of Gaza
    Karma Nabulsi (University of Oxford)Singular and Exemplary: The Theory and Experience of Citizenship in Rousseau. A Response to Karma NabulsiOurida Mostefai (Boston College)
    Chapter ThreeCosmopolitanism after Kant: Claiming Rights Across Borders in a New Century
    Seyla Benhabib (Princeton University)
    The Making of Norms versus the Making of a Rights-bearing Subject: A Response to Seyla BenhabibSaskia Sassen (Columbia University and London School of Economics)

    Part II: Revolutions and Declarations
    Chapter FourPhilosophy, Religion, and the Controversy about Basic Human Rights in 1789
    Jonathan Israel (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)
    A Response to Jonathan IsraelDan Edelstein (Stanford University)

    Chapter FiveSlavery, Emancipation and Human Rights
    Robin Blackburn (Essex and the New School)
    Rights, Resistance and Emancipation: A Response to Robin BlackburnDavid Geggus (University of Florida)

    Part III: Particular Rights: the Pursuit of Happiness and Freedom of Speech

    Chapter SixMy Happiness, Right or Wrong?
    Adam Phillips (Writer and Child psychologist)
    On Being Happy Not to Pursue Happiness: A Response to Adam PhillipsPatrick Mackie (Writer and Independent scholar)

    Chapter SevenToleration and Calumny
    Jeremy Waldron (University of Oxford and New York School of Law)
    Rights Persuasion: A Response to Jeremy WaldronLiora Lazarus (University of Oxford)

    Afterword: The Self-Evidence of Human Rights
    Samuel Moyn (Columbia University)

    List of Contributors
    Index