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Haunted by Paradise (Hardcover)
James Bernard Murphy; Foreword by Nicholas P. Wolterstorff
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R1,037
R861
Discovery Miles 8 610
Save R176 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Although many modern philosophers of law describe custom as merely
a minor source of law, formal law is actually only one source of
the legal customs that govern us. Many laws grow out of custom, and
one measure of a law's success is by its creation of an enduring
legal custom. Yet custom and customary law have long been neglected
topics in unsettled jurisprudential debate. Smaller concerns, such
as whether customs can be legitimized by practice or by
stipulation, stipulated by an authority or by general consent, or
dictated by law or vice versa, lead to broader questions of law and
custom as alternative or mutually exclusive modes of social
regulation, and whether rational reflection in general ought to
replace sub-rational prejudice. Can legal rules function without
customary usage, and does custom even matter in society? The
Philosophy of Customary Law brings greater theoretical clarity to
the often murky topic of custom by showing that custom must be
analyzed into two more logically basic concepts: convention and
habit. James Bernard Murphy explores the nature and significance of
custom and customary law, and how conventions relate to habits in
the four classic theories of Aristotle, Francisco Suarez, Jeremy
Bentham, and James C. Carter. He establishes that customs are
conventional habits and habitual conventions, and allows us to
better grasp the many roles that custom plays in a legal system by
offering a new foundation of understanding for these concepts.
This book concerns the dignity and the degradation of labor.
Because our work has considerable power either to foster or to
undermine our happiness and well-being, the degradation of labor is
a profound obstacle to human flourishing. Yet the moral dimension
of labor has been neglected in our political theory and practice.
In this book, James Bernard Murphy aims to restore productive labor
to its rightful place in moral and political debate. Ever since
Aristotle, there have been many theories of distributive justice
but very little in the way of a theory of justice in production.
Through a bold reconstruction and critique of Aristotle's views of
nature and moral reason, Murphy develops a new Aristotelian theory
of productive labor. According to Aristotle, work has dignity when
the worker executes what he has first conceived in thought, and
work is degraded when one worker merely executes what is conceived
by another. With Aristotle's definition of work as a unity of
conception and execution, we can see what is wrong with work in the
contemporary world: the detailed division of labor has divorced
conception from execution. Although the prevalence of monotonous
and stultifying work is widely regarded as the inevitable cost of
economic progress, Murphy argues that restoring the unity of
conception and execution in the design of jobs is compatible with
our economic interests in efficient production and is required by
our moral interests in human flourishing.
Prophets are wild cards in the game of politics, James Bernard
Murphy writes in this startling new book. They risk their lives by
calling out the abuses of political and religious leaders, forcing
us to confront evils we would prefer to ignore. By setting moral
limits on political leaders, prophets chasten our political
pretensions and remind us there are values that transcend politics.
They wield a third sword—distinct from the familiar swords of
state and church power—their sword is the word of God. The Third
Sword offers a new take on political history, illustrating a theory
of prophetic politics through tales of political crises,
interspersed with direct dialogue between the prophets and their
persecutors. With chapters on Socrates, Jesus, Joan of Arc, Thomas
More, and Martin Luther King, Murphy brings these prophets to life
with storytelling that blends biography, history, and political
theory.
A holistic view of human development that rejects the conventional
stages of childhood, adulthood, and old age When we talk about
human development, we tend to characterize it as proceeding through
a series of stages in which we are first children, then
adolescents, and finally, adults. But as James Bernard Murphy
observes, growth is not limited to the young nor is decline limited
to the aged. We are never trapped within the horizon of a
particular life stage: children anticipate adulthood and adults
recapture childhood. According to Murphy, the very idea of stages
of life undermines our ability to see our lives as a whole. In Your
Whole Life, Murphy asks: what accounts for the unity of a human
life over time? He advocates for an unconventional, developmental
story of human nature based on a nested hierarchy of three
powers-first, each person's unique human genome insures biological
identity over time; second, each person's powers of imagination and
memory insure psychological identity over time; and, third, each
person's ability to tell his or her own life story insures
narrative identity over time. Just as imagination and memory rely
upon our biological identity, so our autobiographical stories rest
upon our psychological identity. Narrative is not the foundation of
personal identity, as many argue, but its capstone. Engaging with
the work of Aristotle, Augustine, Jesus, and Rousseau, as well as
with the contributions of contemporary evolutionary biologists and
psychologists, Murphy challenges the widely shared assumptions in
Western thinking about personhood and its development through
discrete stages of childhood, adulthood, and old age. He offers,
instead, a holistic view in which we are always growing and
declining, always learning and forgetting, and always living and
dying, and finds that only in relation to one's whole life does the
passing of time obtain meaning.
Prophets are wild cards in the game of politics, James Bernard
Murphy writes in this startling new book. They risk their lives by
calling out the abuses of political and religious leaders, forcing
us to confront evils we would prefer to ignore. By setting moral
limits on political leaders, prophets chasten our political
pretensions and remind us there are values that transcend politics.
They wield a third sword—distinct from the familiar swords of
state and church power—their sword is the word of God. The Third
Sword offers a new take on political history, illustrating a theory
of prophetic politics through tales of political crises,
interspersed with direct dialogue between the prophets and their
persecutors. With chapters on Socrates, Jesus, Joan of Arc, Thomas
More, and Martin Luther King, Murphy brings these prophets to life
with storytelling that blends biography, history, and political
theory.
This volume collects some of the best recent writings on St.
Thomas's philosophy of law and includes a critical examination of
Aquinas's theory of the relation between law and morality, his
natural law theory, as well as the modern reformulation of his
approach to natural rights. The volume shows how Aquinas understood
the importance of positive law and demonstrates the modern
relevance of his writings by including Thomistic critiques of
modern jurisprudence and examples of applications of Thomistic
jurisprudence to specific modern legal problems such as federalism,
environmental policy, abortion and euthanasia. The volume also
features an introduction which places Aquinas's writings in the
context of modern jurisprudence as well as an extensive
bibliography. The volume is suited to the needs of jurisprudence
scholars, teachers and students and is an essential resource for
all law libraries.
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Haunted by Paradise (Paperback)
James Bernard Murphy; Foreword by Nicholas P. Wolterstorff
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R666
R566
Discovery Miles 5 660
Save R100 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Why are religious rituals, symbols, and rhetoric so full of images
of blood, sacrifice, and death? Why does religious fervor so often
lead to Holy War, Crusade, and Jihad? No wonder many people assume
that religion tends to give rise to violence. But what if it were
the other way around? What if violence actually gave rise to
religion? So argued the French literary theorist and anthropologist
Rene Girard (1923-2015). Described as the Darwin of the human
sciences, he was elected to the French Academy in 2005 for his
seminal theories of sacred violence. Girard argued that religious
practices function to sublimate, regulate, and discharge human
violence in controlled rituals. Where does violence come from?
According to Girard, from the social nature of human desire itself.
We desire things only because others desire them, so desire is
inherently rivalrous, leading to violent conflict. But if a
scapegoat can be found, then this war of all against all turns into
a war of all against one. Social order, claimed Girard, stems from
the unity of a lynch mob. Religious rituals then serve to
commemorate the primordial murder of the scapegoat. What are we to
make of Girards provocative claims about human desire, violence,
scapegoat killings, and religion? Political philosopher James
Bernard Murphy presents here a series of sharp and witty dialogues
in which Girard attempts to defend his ideas against attacks by
rival theorists, among them, Sigmund Freud, William James, Simone
Weil, Elias Canetti and Joseph de Maistre. Whatever we might think
of his answers, Girard asks challenging, unsettling questions. In
these illuminating and lively exchanges, Girard squares off with
the titans of social theory.
'A wonderful introduction to history's most influential scribblers' -
Steven Pinker
What is truly at stake in politics? Nothing less than how we should
live, as individuals and as communities. This book goes beyond the
surface headlines, the fake news and the hysteria to explore the
timeless questions posed and answers offered by a diverse group of the
30 greatest political thinkers who have ever lived.
Are we political, economic, or religious animals? Should we live in
small city-states, nations, or multinational empires? What values
should politics promote? Should wealth be owned privately or in common?
Do animals also have rights? There is no idea too radical for this
global assortment of thinkers, which includes: Confucius; Plato;
Augustine; Machiavelli; Burke; Wollstonecraft; Marx; Nietzsche; Gandhi;
Qutb; Arendt; Nussbaum, Naess and Rawls.
In each brief chapter, the authors paint a vivid portrait of these
often prescient, always compelling political thinkers, showing how
their ideas grew out of their own dramatic lives and times and evolved
beyond them. Now more than ever we need to be reminded that politics
can be a noble, inspiring and civilising art. And if we want to
understand today's political world, we need to understand the
foundations of politics and its architects. This is the perfect guide
to both.
In this first book-length study of positive law, James Bernard
Murphy rewrites central chapters in the history of jurisprudence by
uncovering a fundamental continuity among four great legal
philosophers: Plato, Thomas Aquinas, Thomas Hobbes, and John
Austin. In their theories of positive law, Murphy argues, these
thinkers represent successive chapters in a single fascinating
story. That story revolves around a fundamental ambiguity: is law
positive because it is deliberately imposed (as opposed to
customary law) or because it lacks moral necessity (as opposed to
natural law)? These two senses of positive law are not coextensive
yet the discourse of positive law oscillates unstably between them.
What, then, is the relation between being deliberately imposed and
lacking moral necessity? Murphy demonstrates how the discourse of
positive law incorporates both normative and descriptive dimensions
of law, and he discusses the relation of positive law not only to
jurisprudence but also to the philosophy of language, ethics,
theories of social order, and biblical law.
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