Equality (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)https://plato.sydney.edu.au/entries////////////////////////////////////////////////equality/
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Legal Positivism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Spring 2009 Edition)https://plato.stanford.edu/Archives/spr2009/entries/legal-positivism/
Encyclopedia of Philosophy . Legal Positivism First published Fri Jan 3, 2003 Legal positivism is the thesis that the existence and content of law depends on social facts and not
Legal Foundations of a Free Societyhttps://xenisa.github.io/kinsella/lffs/legal-foundations-of-a-free-society.html
society is as old as philosophy itself. Indeed, it arises in everyday life even long before any systematic philosophizing is to begin. All throughout intellectual history, one pro
The Postmodern Turn in Philosophy: Theoretical Provocations andNormative Deficits by Steven Best and Douglas Kellnerhttps://pages.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/kellner/papers/postmodernturn.htm
THE POSTMODERN TURN IN PHILOSOPHY: THEORETICAL PROVOCATIONS AND NORMATIVE DEFICITS By Steven Best and Douglas Kellner http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/kellner/kellner.html
Can Environmentalist Escape Philosophy?https://gadfly.igc.org/papers/ceep.htm
Philosophy and Religion Ethics, Moral Issues, the Law The Environment Economics Edu
Mohism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Summer 2008 Edition)https://plato.sydney.edu.au/archives/sum2008/entries/mohism/
Encyclopedia of Philosophy . Mohism First published Mon Oct 21, 2002; substantive revision Fri Apr 20, 2007 Mohism was an influential philosophical, social, and religious movement
The Nature of Law (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Winter 2004 Edition)https://plato.stanford.edu/Archives/Win2004/entries/lawphil-nature/
Encyclopedia of Philosophy . version history HOW TO CITE THIS ENTRY Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S |
Egalitarianism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)https://plato.sydney.edu.au/entries////////////////////////////////////////////////egalitarianism/
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Moral Epistemology (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Spring 2007 Edition)https://plato.sydney.edu.au/archives/spr2007/entries/moral-epistemology/
Encyclopedia of Philosophy . Moral Epistemology First published Tue 4 Feb, 2003 How is moral knowledge possible? This question is central in moral epistemology and marks a cluster
Natural Law: Jerusalem vs. Athenshttp://theonomy.net/natural_law.htm
recent "process philosophy," Van Til built a body of work showing the compromise of Christians with unbelieving thought, primarily in the fields we call "philosophy
Right to Immigratehttps://spot.colorado.edu/~huemer/papers/immigration.htm
approaches in political philosophy—liberal egalitarianism, contractarianism, utilitarianism, and so on—are too controversial to form a secure basis for reasoning. It i
Hedonism as conceived by a digial zombiehttps://www.hedonism.org/chatgpt/
topic in ethical philosophy and the philosophy of mind for thousands of years and continues to be influential today." What distinguishes philosophical hedonism from hedonistic uti
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