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011 | _aBIB MATCHES WORLDCAT | ||
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_a0192892789 _qpbk. |
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020 |
_a9780192892782 _qpbk. |
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035 | _a(ATU)b10432978 | ||
035 | _a(OCoLC)41002759 | ||
040 |
_aDLC _beng _erda _dATU |
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042 | _apcc | ||
050 | 0 | 0 |
_aJA66 _b.P647 1999 |
082 | 0 | 0 |
_a320.01 _221 |
245 | 0 | 0 |
_aPolitical thought / _cedited by Michael Rosen and Jonathan Wolff ; with the assistance of Catriona McKinnon. |
264 | 1 |
_aOxford [England] ; _aNew York [N.Y.] : _bOxford University Press, _c1999. |
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300 |
_axv, 442 pages ; _c24 cm. |
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336 |
_atext _btxt _2rdacontent |
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337 |
_aunmediated _bn _2rdamedia |
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338 |
_avolume _bnc _2rdacarrier |
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490 | 1 | _aOxford readers | |
500 | _aSelection of extracts from political texts. | ||
504 | _aIncludes bibliographical references and index. | ||
505 | 0 | 0 |
_gChapter 1. _tHuman Nature -- _g1. _tThe State Exists By Nature / _rAristotle -- _g2. _tThe Misery of the Natural Condition of Mankind / _rThomas Hobbes -- _g3. _tThe State of Nature and the State of War / _rJohn Locke -- _g4. _tFear and Peace / _rBaron de Montesquieu -- _g5. _tThe Noble Savage / _rJean-Jacques Rousseau -- _g6. _tMan's Character is Formed For Him / _rRobert Owen -- _g7. _tMan as a Productive Being / _rKarl Marx and FriedrichEngels -- _g8. _tNatural Selection / _rCharles Darwin -- _g9. _tThe Advantage of Morality / _rCharles Darwin -- _g10. _tMutual Aid / _rPeter Kropotkin -- _g11. _tWomen as Weaker Partners / _rPlato -- _g12. _tSeparate Spheres / _rAristotle -- _g13. _tThe Likeness and Unlikeness of the Sexes / _rJean-Jacques Rousseau -- _g14. _tThe Rights of Women / _rMary Wollstonecraft -- _g15. _tThe Subjection of Women / _rJohn Stuart Mill -- _g16. _tIn a Different Voice / _rCarol Gilligan -- _g17. _tSocialist Feminism and The Standpoint of Women / _rAlison M Jaggar -- _gChapter 2. _tThe Justification of the State -- _g18. _tPolitical Power / _rJohn Locke -- _g19. _tThe State and Coercion / _rMax Weber -- _g20. _tCreating Leviathan / _rThomas Hobbes -- _g21. _tExpress and Tacit Consent / _rJohn Locke -- _g22. _tNatural Freedom and the Freedom of the Citizen / _rJean-Jacques Rousseau -- _g23. _tThe Hypothetical Contract / _rImmanuel Kant -- _g24. _tThe Irrelevance of Consent / _rDavid Hume -- _g25. _tUtility as the True Foundation / _rJeremy Bentham -- _g26. _tThe Priority of the State over The Individual / _rG.W.F Hegel -- _g27. _tThe Principle of Fairness / _rH.L.A. Hart -- _g28. _tScience and the People / _rMichael Bakunin -- _g29. _tThe Conflict of Autonomy and Authority / _rRobert Paul Wolff -- _g30. _tThe Duty of Obedience / _rPlato -- _g31. _tThe Duty of Disobedience / _rHenry David Thoreau -- _g32. _tAn Unjust Law is No Law / _rMartin Luther King -- _g33. _tCivil Disobedience / _rJohn Rawls -- _gChapter 3. _tDemocracy and Its Difficulties -- _g34. _tRuling as a Skill / _rPlato -- _g35. _tThe Enlightened Despot / _rFrederick the Great -- _g36. _tThe General Will / _rJean-Jacques Rousseau -- _g37. _tFreedom and Equality / _rImmanuel Kant -- _g38. _tThe Democratic Citizen / _rJohn Stuart Mill -- _g39. _tMajority Rule / _rJohn Rawls -- _g40. _tBourgeois and Proletarian Democracy / _rV.I. Lenin -- _g41. _tParticipatory Democracy / _rCarole Pateman -- _g42. _tRule of the People and Rule of Law / _rAristotle -- _g43. _tThe Danger of Faction / _rJames Madison -- _g44. _tTyranny of the Majority / _rAlexis de Tocqueville -- _g45. _tBureaucratic Administration / _rMax Weber -- _g46. _tRule By Oligarchy / _rVilfedo Pareto -- _g47. _tLegislative, Executive, and Federative Powers / _rJohn Locke -- _g48. _tThe Ideal Constitution / _rBaron de Montesquieu -- _gChapter 4. _tLiberty and Rights -- _g49. _tThe Liberty of the Ancients and the Liberty of the Moderns / _rBenjamin Constant -- _g50. _tTwo Concepts of Liberty / _rIsaiah Berlin -- _g51. _tIn Defence of Positive Freedom / _rCharles Taylor -- _g52. _tNo Right to Liberty / _rRonald Dworkin -- _g53. _tOne Simple Principle / _rJohn Stuart Mill -- _g54. _tThe Consequences of Liberty / _rJames Fitzjames Stephen -- _g55. _tThe Enforcement of Morals / _rPartick Devlin -- _g56. _tThe Changing Sense of Morality / _rH.L.A. Hart -- _g57. _tThe Futility of Intolerance / _rJohn Locke -- _g58. _tFree Expression and the Authority of the State / _rThomas Scanlon -- _g59. _tThe Satanic Verses / _rJeremy Waldron -- _g60. _tOnly Words / _rCatherine MacKinnon -- _g61. _tThe Democratic Citizen / _rPericles -- _g62. _tThe Requirements of Citizenship / _rAristotle -- _g63. _tThe Servility of the Moderns / _rNiccolo Machiavelli -- _g64. _tThe Nature of Modern Servitude / _rAlexis de Tocqueville -- _g65. _tThe Republican Ideal of Political Liberty / _rQuentin Skinner -- _g66. _tNonsense on Stilts / _rJeremy Bentham -- _g67. _tThe Rights of Egoistic Man / _rKarl Marx -- _g68. _tRights as Side-Constraints / _rRobert Nozick -- _g69. _tTaking Rights Seriously / _rRonald Dworkin -- _g70. _tIn Favour of Capital Punishment / _rJohn Stuart Mill -- _g71. _tPunishment and Responsibility / _rH.L.A. Hart -- _g72. _tWhere Deterrence Theory Goes Wrong / _rRobert Nozick -- _gChapter 5. _tEconomic Justice -- _g73. _tLabour as the Basis of Property / _rJohn Locke -- _g74. _tThe Earth Belongs to Nobody / _rJean-Jacques Rousseau -- _g75. _tProperty as Expression / _rG.W.F Hegel -- _g76. _tThe Right to the Use of the Earth / _rHerbert Spencer -- _g77. _tMoney, the Universal Whore / _rKarl Marx -- _g78. _tThe True Foundation of Private Property / _rKarl Marx -- _g79. _tProperty and Aggression / _rSigmund Freud -- _g80. _tReaping Without Sowing / _rR.H. Tawney -- _g81. _tDifficulties With Mixing Labour / _rRobert Nozick -- _g82. _tThe Dangers of Government Interference / _rAdam Smith -- _g83. _tAppearance and Reality / _rKarl Marx -- _g84. _tPrices as A Code / _rF.A. Hayek -- _g85. _tThe Tyranny of Controls / _rMilton Friedman and Rose Friedman -- _g86. _tPoverty as Lack of Freedom / _rG.A. Cohen -- _g87. _tThe Grasshopper and the Ants / _rAesop -- _g88. _tReciprocity / _rAristotle -- _g89. _tEquality and Inequality / _rAristotle -- _g90. _tThe Common Stock / _rGerald Winstanley -- _g91. _tThe Impossibility of Equality / _rDavid Hume -- _g92. _tFrom Each According to His Abilities, To Each According to His Needs / _rKarl Marx -- _g93. _tLooking Backward / _rEdward Bellamy -- _g94. _tThe Impossibility of Planning / _rF.A. Hayek -- _g95. _tTwo Principles of Justice / _rJohn Rawls -- _g96. _tThe Entitlement Theory / _rRobert Nozick -- _g97. _tEquality of Resources / _rRonald Dworkin -- _gChapter 6. _tJustice Between Groups -- _g98. _tPerpetual Peace / _rImmanuel Kant -- _g99. _tThe Civilizing Influence of Commerce / _rRichard Cobden -- _g100. _tJust and Unjust War / _rMichael Walzer -- _g101. _tThe Limits of Warfare / _rThomas Nagel -- _g102. _tNational Sentiment / _rIsaiah Berlin -- _g103. _tIs Patriotism a Virtue? / _rAlasdair MacIntyre -- _g104. _tThe Message of Affirmative Action / _rThomas Hill -- _g105. _tNational Self-Determination' / _rAvishai Margalit and Joseph Raz -- _g106. _tJustice Between Generations' / _rBrian Barry -- _g107. _tFamine, Affluence and Morality / _rPeter Singer -- _g108. _tLifeboat Earth / _rOnora O'Neill -- _gChapter 7. _tAlternatives to Liberalism -- _g109. _tLegitimation Crisis / _rJurgen Habermas -- _g110. _tLiberalism in Retreat / _rMichael Walzer -- _g111. _tThe Artificiality of Liberalism / _rMichael Walzer -- _g112. _tEternal Society / _rEdmund Burke -- _g113. _tThe Transmission of Culture / _rT.S. Eliot -- _g114. _tOn Being Conservative / _rMichael Oakeshott -- _g115. _tIdentification and Subjectivity / _rCharles Taylor -- _g116. _tTradition and the Unity of a Life / _rAlasdair MacIntyre -- _g117. _tConceptions of Community / _rMichael Sandel -- _g118. _tWork in Communist Society / _rKarl Marx -- _g119. _tThe Communist Manifesto / _rKarl Marx -- _g120. _tThe Realm of Freedom / _rKarl Marx -- _g121. _tThe Soul of Man Under Socialism / _rOscar Wilde -- _g122. _tProductive Activity / _rErnest Mandel -- _g123. _tSocialism and Equality of Opportunity / _rG.A. Cohen -- _g124. _tThe Impulse Towards Justice / _rFriedrich Nietzsche -- _g125. _tPower /Knowledge / _rMichel Foucault -- _g126. _tThe Priority of Democracy to Philosophy / _rRichard Rorty -- _gChapter 8. _tProgress and Civilization -- _g127. _tThe Effect of the Arts and Sciences / _rJean-Jacques Rousseau -- _g128. _tDivision of Labour / _rAdam Smith -- _g129. _tFragmentation and Aesthetic Education / _rFriedrich Schiller -- _g130. _tDevelopment of the Productive Forces / _rKarl Marx -- _g131. _tOur Self-Destructive Impulse / _rFyodor Dostoyevsky -- _g132. _tTransition to Communism / _rFriedrich Engels -- _g133. _tDisenchantment / _rMax Weber -- _g134. _tThe Utopian Method / _rKarl Popper -- _g135. _tThe End of History / _rFrancis Fukuyama. |
588 | _aMachine converted from AACR2 source record. | ||
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_aPolitical science _xPhilosophy _9326900 |
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_aRosen, Michael _eeditor. _91032305 |
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_aWolff, Jonathan, _eeditor. _9238575 |
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_aMcKinnon, Catriona. _91032307 |
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_aOxford readers. _91029644 |
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