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  1. Kill Stories: A Critical Narrative Genre in the Zhuangzi.Hans-Georg Moeller - 2023 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 22 (3):397-412.
    This essay suggests that a narrative genre of “kill stories” has a prominent philosophical function in the Zhuangzi 莊子. Kill stories depict the domestication and disciplining of “wild” living beings eventually resulting in their death. They typically show an incongruity between the moral attitude of the perpetrators and their destructive deeds. Thereby, they illustrate a critique of a broader sociopolitical “master narrative” associated with the Confucian tradition that had a strong impact on ideology and ethical values in early China. In (...)
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  • Non-domination with Nothingness: Supplementing Pettit’s Theory of Democratic Deliberation.Jun-Hyeok Kwak - 2023 - Journal of Social and Political Philosophy 2 (1):60-77.
    Democratic deliberation has an inherent tension between self-government and good government. It grants democratic politics a legitimacy which depends on its responsiveness to the collective opinion of the members of a political community, while it also seeks good decisions, the justification of which adheres to an ideal of right action beyond the opinion of the majority. In this regard, Philip Pettit proposes liberty as non-domination as a regulative ideal that guides democratic deliberation for self-government without jettisoning the ideal of good (...)
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  • Global Justice without Self-centrism: Tianxia in Dialogue on Mount Uisan.Jun-Hyeok Kwak - 2021 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 20 (2):289-307.
    This article tackles the theories of global justice whose “Chinese-style” cosmopolitanism is espoused by the notion of tianxia 天下. Specifically, I first examine the Chinese-style cosmopolitanism driven by the reinterpretation of tianxia. In doing so, I claim that it retains the very fallacy that can be found in liberal cosmopolitanism in failing to provide us with a regulative principle through which different justifications for justice can be steered toward a democratic deliberation between states. Second, through analyzing Dialogue on Mount Uisan (...)
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