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  1. Vices, Virtues, and Dispositions.Lorenzo Azzano & Andrea Raimondi - 2023 - TheoLogica: An International Journal for Philosophy of Religion and Philosophical Theology 7 (2).
    In this paper, we embark on the complicated discussion about the nature of vice in Virtue Ethics through a twofold approach: first, by taking seriously the claim that virtues (and certain flavours of vices) are genuinely dispositional features possessed by agents, and secondly, by employing a pluralistic attitude borrowed from Battaly’s pluralism (2008). Through these lenses, we identify three varieties of viciousness: incontinence, indifference, and malevolence. The upshot is that the notion of vice is not as categorically homogeneous as that (...)
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  • The time(s) of the gift.John O'Neill - 2001 - Angelaki 6 (2):41 – 48.
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  • Supplication as violence: The provision of institutionalized care and the essence of giving.Prashan Ranasinghe - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    This article casts its attention on acts of supplication in institutional settings. The article focuses upon institutions geared towards the provision of care, that is, sites that are designed to provide services to those in need. The article claims that every act of supplication is an act of violence deployed upon the supplicant by his/her interlocutor and the institution more broadly. This is not violence of an overt type; it is tacit and subtle and takes root at the very essence (...)
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  • Oh, My Others, There is No Other!: Civic Recognition and Hegelian Other-Wiseness.John O’Neill - 2001 - Theory, Culture and Society 18 (2-3):77-90.
    We are currently approaching a political stalemate between two discursive idioms of community and difference. A third way has been introduced through the politics of identity recognition. Yet the latter tends to overwhelm the politics of community on the grounds of its outmoded universalism and sacrifice of singularity. More with the interests of a welfare society in mind than the stakes in cultural politics, the article restates the Hegelian dialectic of recognition as a critique of both absolute subject-position and absolute (...)
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  • The time of the gift.John O'Neill - 2001 - Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities 6 (2):41-48.
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