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David of Sassoun (Hardcover)
Arpine Khatchadourian; Edited by Haig Khatchadourian; Foreword by Roy Arthur Swanson
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R836
R685
Discovery Miles 6 850
Save R151 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This work is a detailed analytical study of different forms of
silent doing. It explores a range of topics related to silence,
including the theory of silent doing and its relationship to other
forms of action and communication, silence and aesthetics, the
ethics and politics of silence, and the religious dimensions of
silence. The book, as an original contribution to analytical
philosophy, should be of interest to philosophers and students.
The Morality of Terrorism argues that terrorism violates certain
human rights, and just war, and consequentialist moral principles,
and so is always wrong. In distinguishing freedom fighting from
terrorism, this study lays down stringent conditions derived from
just war theory, for the moral justifiability of freedom fighting,
such as some revolutions, civil wars, and guerilla warfare. This
book then evaluates the morality of actual and possible judicial
and military responses to terrorism by targeted governments. An
appendix provides a case study (the Palestine problem) of root
causes of political and moralistic-religious terrorism.
Truth: Its criteria and conditions is an in-depth
critical-and-constructive inquiry in almost equal measure. The
theories of the nature of empirical truth critically considered
include two forms of the traditional correspondence theory; truth
as appraisal; truth as identity of proposition and truth; en
emotive theory of truth; P.F. Strawson's performative theory, and
N. Rescher's novel theory of a coherentist criterion of truth. The
constructive parts include an analysis of the concept of "a fact,"
the meaning and uses of 'true' and 'false' in empirical statements,
together with the various sorts of conditions for their correct
application; the appraisive/evaluative uses of true and false
statements; and the performative-cum-cognitive uses of 'true'
empirical statements; and the conditions of the performative uses
of 'true.' A significant claim about the concept of truth is its
indefinablity; albeit for quite different reasons from Gottlob
Frege's reason based on his argument against the correspondence
theory of truth.
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David of Sassoun (Paperback)
Arpine Khatchadourian; Edited by Haig Khatchadourian; Foreword by Roy Arthur Swanson
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R360
R306
Discovery Miles 3 060
Save R54 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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About the Contributor(s): Haig Khatchadourian is Emeritus Professor
of Philosophy at The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. He is the
author of twelve books in philosophy and two volumes of poetry. He
is a member of the International Academy of Philosophy and of The
Academy of Sciences in Armenia, as well as a Fellow of the Royal
Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufacture & Commerce,
United Kingdom.
A Palestinian state alongside a secure Israel is the sine qua non
of a stable peace between Arabs and Israelis, and at this late date
would realize a modicum of the Palestinians' moral and legal
territorial rights (roughly equal to those of the Jews/Israelis),
and a long-standing aspiration for self-determination. A defense of
the "two-state" option, and a qualified defense of the Oslo Accords
against Islamist and radical Jewish rejectionist critics is
therefore offered. Besides satisfying Palestinian aspirations,
Palestinian statehood would help open the way to a comprehensive
peace between the Arabs and Israel, through a just, negotiated
settlement of the Syrian/Lebanese-Israeli territorial disputes. A
comprehensive peace, in turn, should stimulate economic and
cultural cooperation between Israel and the Arab countries (the
"peace dividend"), lending it additional strength. Increased
stability should also result from the hoped-for liberalization and
democratization of the region's Arab regimes.
Community and Communitarianism presents--and defends in detail--a
care-centered ideal of a good and moral community: a form of social
organization imbued with the virtues of a care-centered ethic, such
as cooperation (in "teleological communities," cooperation in the
realization of communal goals); mutual concern and solidarity;
sympathy and empathy; benevolence; a spirit of sacrifice; and
affection, love, and caring. It is argued that a care-centered
ethic, hence a care-centered community, needs to be constrained and
fortified by equal respect for the participants' basic human right
to be treated as moral subjects, together with fair and just
treatment. Besides contributing to social philosophy, the book
contributes significantly to ethics.
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