Published by Pearson (February 6, 2013) © 2013

Stephen Riley
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    ISBN-13: 9781408278888R365

    Legal Philosophy ,1st edition

    Language: British English

    Introduction

     

    Chapter 1  Justice

    1    Ends

    a. Judgment

    b. Desert

    c. Truth

     

    2 Means

    a. Adjudication

    b. Impartiality

    c. Equality

     

    3 Individuals

    a. The individual’s good

    b. Rights

    c. Status

     

    4 Collectives

    a. The common good

    b. The rule of law

    c. Authority

     

    5    Philosophy and justice

    a. Meta-theory

    b. Scepticism

    c. Pragmatism

     

    Questions

     

    Concepts and methods

    §    Theorising

     

    Further reading

     

     

     

    Chapter 2  Person

    1    Facts and values

    a. Humans and persons

    b. Science and facts

    c. Humanity and human nature

     

    2    Aristotle

    a. The human species

    b. Political animals

    c. The situated person

     

    3    Humanism

    a. Humanity and persons

    b. Liberty

    c. Fraternity and equality

     

    4    Feminism

    a. The second sex

    b. Nature as ideology

    c. Identity politics

     

    5    Freedom

    a. Freedom as liberty

    b. Freedom as rationality

    c. Freedom as autonomy

     

    Questions

     

    Concepts and methods

    §    Ideas and ideology

     

    Further reading

     

     

     

    Chapter 3  Good

    1    The good

    a. The human good

    b. A good life and justice

    c. Happiness and harmony

     

    2    Plato

    a. The good and the individual

    b. The good and the state

    c. Contemporary Platonism

     

    3    Natural law

    a. Early natural law

    b. Natural law and religion

    c. Modern natural law

     

    4    Utilitarianism

    a. Hedonism

    b. Utilitarianism

    c. Variants of utilitarianism

     

    5    Place and property

    a. Property

    b. Environment

    c. Capability

     

    Questions

     

    Concepts and methods

    § Values

     

    Further reading

     

     

    Chapter 4  Right

    1    Right

    a. Right and truth

    b. Right answers

    c. Right as justice

     

    2    Right as correspondence

    a. Kant: right as duty

    b. Hegel: right made social

    c. Marx: right made material

     

    3    Right as coherence

    a. Hobbes: right as contract

    b. Mill: right as liberty

    c. Rawls: right as fairness

     

    4    Rights

    a. Hohfeld: distinguishing rights

    b. Dworkin: rights as trumps

    c. Nozick: rights as constraints

     

    5    Human rights

    a. From natural rights to human rights

    b. Particularity versus universality

    c. Human rights and liberalism

     

    Questions

     

    Concepts and methods

    § Logic

     

    Further reading

     

     

    Chapter 5  Rule

    1    Rules

    a. Rules as commands

    b. Forms and functions of rules

    c. Formalism and anti-formalism

     

    2    Positivism

    a. Origins of positivism

    b. Logical posit