Acknowledgements-Notes on Contributors.- Introduction.- Part I Practical Ethics.- The Role of Philosophy in Public Matters.- On Philosophy’s Contribution to Public Matters: Charting the Course of a Debate.- Abortion and the Right to Not Be Pregnant.- Acts, Omissions, and Assisted Death: Some Reflections on the Marie Fleming Case.- Part II Ethical Commitment and Political Engagement.- Writing as Social Disclosure: A Hundred Years Ago and Now.- Ethics, Markets, and Cultural Goods.- In Defence of Meaningful Work as a Public Policy Concern.- Working from Both Ends: The Dual Role of Philosophy in Research Ethics.- Part III The Justification of Power and Resistance.- Three Mistakes about Democracy.- Karl Marx after a Century and a Half.- Neither Victims nor Executioners: Camus as Public Intellectual Violence and Responsibility.- Index.
Allyn Fives is Lecturer in the School of Political Science and Sociology, and the UNESCO Child and Family Research Centre, National University of Ireland, Galway, Republic of Ireland. He is the author of Political Reason: Morality and the Public Sphere (2013) and Political and Philosophical Debates in Welfare (2008), and is currently working on a book about power and childhood.
Keith Breen is Senior Lecturer in Political and Social Theory at Queen’s University, Belfast, Northern Ireland. He is the author of Under Weber’s Shadow: Modernity, Subjectivity and Politics in Habermas, Arendt and MacIntyre (2012) and co-editor of After the Nation? Critical Reflections on Nationalism and Postnationalism (with S. O’Neill, 2010) and of Freedom and Domination: Exploring Republican Freedom (2016).
“With Philosophy and Political Engagement: Reflection in the Public Sphere, Allyn Fives and Keith Breen present to us … a timely and impressive set of reflections upon the practical and political role for philosophy and ethics both within and beyond the campus bounds. … No doubt this volume will be of interest to students and scholars in the fields of philosophy (both analytic and continental), social and political theory and the humanities and social sciences more broadly.” (Liam Farrell, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Vol. 21 (94), 2018)
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