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  1. Against autonomy: justifying coercive paternalism.Sarah Conly - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (5):349-349.
    Too often, we as individuals do things that harm us, that seriously interfere with our being able to live in the way that we want. We eat food that makes us obese, that promotes diabetes, heart failure and other serious illness, while at the same time, we want to live long and healthy lives. Too many of us smoke cigarettes, even while acknowledging we wish we had never begun. We behave in ways that undercut our ability to reach some of (...)
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  • A Turn to Empire.Jennifer Pitts - 2007 - Ethics and International Affairs 21 (2).
    A dramatic shift in British and French ideas about empire unfolded in the sixty years straddling the turn of the nineteenth century. As Jennifer Pitts shows in A Turn to Empire, Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, and Jeremy Bentham were among many at the start of this period to criticize European empires as unjust as well as politically and economically disastrous for the conquering nations. By the mid-nineteenth century, however, the most prominent British and French liberal thinkers, including John Stuart Mill (...)
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  • (1 other version)Pleasure as Self-Discovery.Samuel Clark - 2012 - Ratio 25 (3):260-276.
    This paper uses readings of two classic autobiographies, Edmund Gosse's Father & Son and John Stuart Mill's Autobiography, to develop a distinctive answer to an old and central question in value theory: What role is played by pleasure in the most successful human life? A first section defends my method. The main body of the paper then defines and rejects voluntarist, stoic, and developmental hedonist lessons to be taken from central crises in my two subjects' autobiographies, and argues for a (...)
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  • Toward a Feminist Theory of the State.Catharine A. MacKinnon - 1989 - Law and Philosophy 10 (4):447-452.
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  • John Stuart mill and experiments in living.Elizabeth S. Anderson - 1991 - Ethics 102 (1):4-26.
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  • The Quest for Certainty.M. C. Otto - 1931 - Philosophical Review 40 (1):79.
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  • What Is Liberalism?Duncan Bell - 2014 - Political Theory 42 (6):682-715.
    Liberalism is a term employed in a dizzying variety of ways in political thought and social science. This essay challenges how the liberal tradition is typically understood. I start by delineating different types of response—prescriptive, comprehensive, explanatory—that are frequently conflated in answering the question “what is liberalism?” I then discuss assorted methodological strategies employed in the existing literature: after rejecting “stipulative” and “canonical” approaches, I outline a contextualist alternative. Liberalism, on this account, is best characterised as the sum of the (...)
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  • The liberal critique of the harm principle.Donald A. Dripps - 1998 - Criminal Justice Ethics 17 (2):3-18.
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  • On Liberty and Liberalism: The Case of John Stuart Mill.Gertrude Himmelfarb - 1976 - Philosophy 51 (197):365-367.
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  • Mill on Liberty.Daniel Little - 1983 - Philosophical Review 92 (3):434.
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  • Individuality, Custom and Progress.Jonathan Riley - 1991 - Utilitas 3 (2):217.
    If harm is restricted to mean perceptible damage suffered by an agent against his wishes, so that his mere dislike with no evidence of injury is excluded, then Mill's liberty principle arguably is ‘one very simple principle’ as he claims. But even so, what of John Gray's charge that the liberty principle relies on a ‘radically defective’ notion of individuality or autonomy that is incompatible with every civil society's cultural and moral traditions? If he is correct about this, then Mill's (...)
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  • The Improvement of Mankind. The Social and Political Thought of John Stuart Mill.Alan Ryan & John M. Robson - 1969 - Philosophical Quarterly 19 (77):360.
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  • Liberal Obituary? [REVIEW]Loren E. Lomasky - 1991 - Ethics 102 (1):140-154.
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  • Human Nature and History: A Study of the Development of Liberal Political Thought.Anthony Holloway & Robert Denoon Cumming - 1971 - Philosophical Quarterly 21 (83):185.
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  • Writings on India.John StuartHG Mill - 1990 - University of Toronto Press.
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  • J. S. Mill.R. J. Halliday - 1976 - Philosophical Quarterly 26 (103):193-194.
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  • The Improvement of Mankind: The Social and Political Thought of John Stuart Mill.John Robson - 1968 - University of Toronto Press.
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