2203 - Philosophy
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This collection contains Flinders' staff research in Philosophy, reportable as part of Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA), from 2001-
Items are added automatically from Flinders University Research Services Office.
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Item Aristotle's Theory of Justice as the Basis of Rawls' Justice as Fairness(Flinders University, 2007) Hunt, Ian EdgellItem The anonymous Iamblichi and the double arguments(Duckworth, 2008) Silvermintz, Daniel; O'Grady, Patricia FrancesItem Historical materialism and the state(2006) Lockwood, DavidItem Hippias of Elis(Department of Languages, Modern Greek, Flinders University of South Australia, 2005) O'Grady, Patricia FrancesItem Is induction epistemologically prior to deduction?(2004) Couvalis, Spyridon GeorgeItem Gray and the politics of pluralism(2006) Crowder, George ErrolItem Miletus(Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2005) O'Grady, Patricia FrancesItem Berlin, value pluralism and the common good: a reply to Brian Trainor(2008) Crowder, George ErrolItem What is a Sophist?(Duckworth, 2008) O'Grady, Patricia FrancesItem The One and the Many: Reading Isaiah Berlin(Prometheus Books, 2007) Hardy, Henry; Crowder, George ErrolItem The Sophists: an introduction(Duckworth, 2008) O'Grady, Patricia FrancesItem Process Physics(2003) Cahill, Reginald ThomasItem Simulation, collapse and human motivation(2003) Ravenscroft, Ian MartinItem Moral cognitivism and character(2005) Taylor, Craig DuncanItem Environmental visions: deleuze and the modalities of nature(2004) Halsey, Mark JohnItem Human Rights and Cosmopolitan Liberalism(2007) Langlois, Anthony JohnItem Marx and Rawls on the Justice of Capitalism and the Market(Department of Philosophy and Centre for Applied Philosophy, 2007) Hunt, Ian EdgellMarx and Rawls appear to have quite different views of justice. Marx claims that the concept of justice functions ideologically to represent conduct required by the prevailing mode of production as universally binding imperatives. Rawls claims that justice is the first virtue of society, whose principles may be agreed to by all persons who impartially and rationally deliberate on the issue of fairly dividing the burdens and benefits of social cooperation. I argue that these apparently different positions on justice can be reconciled, although important differences between the standpoints of Marx and Rawls remain.Item Anaxagoras of Clazomenae(Ashgate PubIishing Limited, 2005) O'Grady, Patricia FrancesItem Adelaide Festival of Ideas(2003) Phiddian, Robert AndrewItem Meet the Philosophers of Ancient Greece: Everything you always wanted to know about Ancient Greek Philosophy but were afraid to ask(Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2005) O'Grady, Patricia Frances
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