30-Day No-Hassle Returns
We guarantee your satisfaction on every purchase or rental with a full refund within 30 days of your purchase date.
Fast, Same-Day Customer Service
If you need help, our friendly, helpful Customer Service team will contact you the same business day.
The Best Prices on Textbook Rentals, Guaranteed
You can shop with confidence with the best rental prices at ValoreBooks.com. If you find a lower priced rental, we will match it.

Evolution of Rights in Liberal Theory: An Essay in Critical Anthropology

by

Shapiro, I.

OUT OF STOCK - We are increasing our inventory daily! - Please try again later.
Evolution of Rights in Liberal Theory: An Essay in Critical Anthropology, ISBN 9780521320436 Own This Book? Sell It
ISBN-13:

9780521320436

ISBN:

0521320437

Pub Date: 1986
Publisher: Cambridge University Press Summary: Ian Shapiro offers a systematic comparative evaluation of the writings of contemporary liberal rights theorists and those of their seventeenth-century predecessors. He shows how contemporary arguments about rights and justice evolved out of the contractarian tradition of the seventeenth century, but he argues that they are dangerous mutations of that tradition. Some of the deepest difficulties of contemporary rights  [read more]
THE EXTRA MILE GUARANTEE
  • 30-Day No-Hassle Returns
  • Fast, Same-Day Customer Service
  • The Best Prices on Textbook Rentals
Read More
NEED HELP PAYING FOR COLLEGE?
  • Find student loan options quickly and easily
  • Compare loans to find the best fit for you
  • Apply for the loan that meets your needs
Find Loan
Product Details
ISBN-13:

9780521320436


ISBN:

0521320437


Pub Date: 1986
Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Ian Shapiro offers a systematic comparative evaluation of the writings of contemporary liberal rights theorists and those of their seventeenth-century predecessors. He shows how contemporary arguments about rights and justice evolved out of the contractarian tradition of the seventeenth century, but he argues that they are dangerous mutations of that tradition. Some of the deepest difficulties of contemporary rights theories derive from the appropriation of parts of the older tradition without the unifying assumptions about knowledge and science that gave the seventeenth-century arguments their underlying coherence. Liberals have also sought to provide foundations for their political philosophies by infusing the English contract tradition with a version of Kant's ethics, and Ian Shapiro argues that this deontological foundation is untenable. He concludes by arguing that it is impossible to theorise normatively about substantive issues of social justice without dealing with controversial empirical questions.

Where's My Stuff?
Shipping & Returns