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  • Forgotten Justice: Forms of Justice in the History of Legal and Political Theory

    Forgotten Justice by Beever, Allan;

    Forms of Justice in the History of Legal and Political Theory

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 117.50
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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 14 February 2013

    • ISBN 9780199675487
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages342 pages
    • Size 240x162x26 mm
    • Weight 660 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    Challenging the assumptions of modern political and legal philosophy, this book presents a historical account of the development of thinking about justice and political obligations. It argues against the modern fixation with the state, and for a return to traditional conceptions of political community and the law.

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    Long description:

    Throughout much of the history of political philosophy, many of the great philosophers begin their work with an investigation of private law. Why is this? And why is the central focus of our modern concern, the state, examined so late in their works? This book suggests an answer to these and related questions. It reveals that there are two general ways of thinking about the legal and the political: the modern which sees all through the lens of the state, and the traditional which begins with individuals and with the normative relations that exist between them building only slowly towards the community and the state.

    In the modern view, private law is understood as a method for achieving certain social goals. As such, it can be overlooked by political philosophy. For the traditional view, on the other hand, private law is of central philosophical importance, because it is there that we observe a society's enunciation of its most fundamental political and legal values. Arguing that an understanding of the traditional view is essential to an understanding of private law and political life, this book highlights how the modern conception is seriously distorting in this regard.

    A story unfolds throughout the chapters: the story of the growth and decline of the traditional view in political and legal thought. It challenges the modern fixation with the state, arguing for a return to the traditional view of legal and political community.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction
    The Modern Conception of Political Philosophy and Law
    Part I: Discovery
    Plato: A Beginning
    Plato: A New Beginning
    Aristotle
    Cicero
    Part II: Establishment
    Aquinas
    Pufendorf
    Kant
    Part III: Forgetting
    Hobbes
    Locke
    The Utilitarians
    Part IV: Implications
    Legal Analysis
    Political Philosophy
    Conclusion
    Bibliography

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