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Arguing About Political Philosophy Matt Zwolinski (University of San Diego, USA)

Arguing About Political Philosophy By Matt Zwolinski (University of San Diego, USA)

Arguing About Political Philosophy by Matt Zwolinski (University of San Diego, USA)


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Arguing About Political Philosophy Summary

Arguing About Political Philosophy by Matt Zwolinski (University of San Diego, USA)

This second edition of Arguing About Political Philosophy is the most complete, up-to-date, and interdisciplinary anthology of its kind. Its selections cover both classic philosophical sources such as Hobbes and Rousseau, and contemporary figures such as Robert Nozick and G.A. Cohen. But additional excerpts from economists, psychologists, novelists, and legal theorists help students from diverse intellectual backgrounds to connect with and appreciate the problems and distinctive methodology of political philosophy.

This second edition also goes beyond any other anthology on the market in its coverage of traditionally under-represented views such as libertarianism, neo-socialism, feminism, and critical race theory. And it is one of the only anthologies to go beyond A Theory of Justice in its coverage of the political thought of John Rawls.

The volume is divided into 3 parts - Foundational Concepts; Government, the Economy and Morality; and Applied Political Philosophy - covering core arguments and emerging debates in topics like:

  • social contract theory
  • political economy
  • property rights
  • freedom
  • equality
  • immigration
  • global distributive justice

The new companion website offers valuable resources for instructors and students alike, including sample quizzes, exams, and writing assignments, extensive study questions for each reading, and an online version of the What's Your Political Philosophy self-assessment.

Arguing About Political Philosophy Reviews

Browsing the table of contents of Zwolinski's Arguing About Political Philosophy got me eager to teach Introduction to Political Philosophy next time using this text. The readings are well chosen and combine classic texts and state of the art recent work on a broad range of crucial topics within political philosophy better than any other introductory text I know of. I will surely be using this excellent text.

David Sobel, Syracuse University

It's unusual for a textbook to possess both breadth and depth, but Zwolinski achieves just that. Debates over the meaning of central political concepts, and their reflection in several salient current political issues, are presented through a range of carefully selected readings representing both mainstream and other positions, historical and contemporary. The result is a strongly engaging introduction to the concerns of political philosophy.

Hillel Steiner, University of Manchester

This book is like a time machine, right from your own armchair or library carrel! One of the things students find scary about philosophy is the emphasis on mastering thinkers. The recent resurgence in interest in studying philosophy has been caused in part by a reorientation toward problems. You can't study problems without time travel: what would Hume have thought of Rawls? How would Hobbes have reacted to Martin Luther King? Arguing About Political Philosophy is a portal to the kind of intellectual time travel that reveals why philosophy is at the core of a liberal education.

Michael Munger, Duke University

Matt Zwolinski has assembled a lively anthology that retains a commitment to high standards while being extremely student-friendly as well. Arguing about Political Philosophy is above all about ideas, and it is refreshing to see so many diverse ideological perspectives brought together in one teaching text. Well-organized and judiciously selected, this collection provides an ideal foundation on which to build your own world-class course in political philosophy.

John Tomasi, Brown University

This excellent anthology presents political philosophy and theory within the social sciences as well as the liberal arts. Its thematic units combine selections from historical and contemporary canonical works with well-chosen supplemental texts ranging from literature to economics. It also lets students encounter an unusually wide range of normative positions, and so makes clear that the central problems of political philosophy remain live questions for debate.

Jacob T. Levy, McGill University

About Matt Zwolinski (University of San Diego, USA)

Matt Zwolinski is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Diego, co-director of USD's Institute for Law and Philosophy, and the founder of and frequent contributor to the popular Bleeding Heart Libertarians blog. He is the author of numerous articles in political philosophy on topics such as exploitation, price gouging, and sweatshop labor.

Table of Contents

    Part 1 - Foundational Concepts

    a. Political Authority

    Social Contract Theory and its Critics

      Thomas Hobbes - Excerpts from Leviathan

      Robert Axelrod - Excerpts from The Evolution of Cooperation

      John Locke - Excerpts from Second Treatise of Civil Government

      David Hume - Of the Original Contract

      Murray Rothbard - Society without a State, The Libertarian Forum

      Virginia Held - Non-contractual Society: A Feminist View, Canadian Journal of Philosophy

      Charles Mills - Excerpts from The Racial Contract

      Obedience to Authority

      Plato - Crito

      Stanley Milgram - The Perils of Obedience

      Martin Luther King - Letter from a Birmingham Jail

      M.B.E. Smith - Is There a Prima Facie Duty to Obey the Law?

      b. Rights

      UN - Universal Declaration of Human Rights

      James Nickel, Making Sense of Human Rights,

      Robert Nozick - Libertarian Rights

      c. Justice

      David Hume - Justice as Convention

      John Stuart Mill - Justice and Utility, excerpts from Utilitarianism,

      John Rawls - A Theory of Justice, excerpts from Theory of Justice

      d. Political Liberlism

      Michael Sandel - The Procedural Republic and the Unencumbered Self

      John Rawls, Justice as Fairness: Political Not Metaphysical,

      Gerald Gaus, The Moral Foundations of Liberal Neutrality

      Part 2 - Government, The Economy, and Morality

      a. Political Economy

      Karl Marx and Frederick Engels - Communist Manifesto

      Karl Marx and Frederick Engels - Critique of the Gotha Program

      Adam Smith, excerpts from The Wealth of Nations

      Charles Wolf - Market Failure, excerpt from Markets or Governments

      Randy Simmons - Pathological Politics: The Anatomy of Government Failure

      b. Property Rights

      John Locke - Excerpts from Second Treatise of Civil Government

      Henry George - The Injustice of Private Property in Land,

      David Schmidtz - The Institution of Property

      c. Distributive Justice

      Robert Nozick - The Entitlement Theory of Justice

      Friedrich Hayek - The Atavism of Social Justice

      G.A. Cohen - Why Not Socialism

      Philippe Van Parijs - A Basic Income for All

      e. Freedom

      John Stuart Mill - On Liberty

      Isaiah Berlin - Two Concepts of Liberty

      Franklin Delano Roosevelt - The Four Freedoms

      Philip Pettit - Republican Political Theory

      f. Equality

      Kurt Vonnegut - Harrison Bergeron

      Richard Arneson - Equality and Equal Opportunity for Welfare,

      David Schmidtz - Equal Respect and Equal Shares,

      Jean Jacques Rousseau - Discourse on the Origins of Inequality,

      Catharine MacKinnon, Difference and Dominance

      Part 3 - Applied Political Philosophy

      a. Democratic Deliberation and Voting

      Amy Gutmann and Dennis Thompson - Moral Disagreement in a Democracy,

      Jason Brennan - Political Liberty: Who Needs It?

      b. Immigration

        Michael Huemer - Is There a Right to Immigrate?

        David Miller - Immigration: The Case for Limits

        c. Global Distributive Justice

          Peter Singer - Excerpts from The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty

          Thomas Pogge - World Poverty and Human Rights

          Loren Lomasky - Liberalism Beyond Borders

          Additional information

          NLS9780415535823
          9780415535823
          0415535824
          Arguing About Political Philosophy by Matt Zwolinski (University of San Diego, USA)
          New
          Paperback
          Taylor & Francis Ltd
          20140609
          740
          N/A
          Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
          This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

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