|
Showing 1 - 25 of
168 matches in All Departments
Richard Eason's father committed suicide when Richard was ten
years old, and the memory of the event has haunted the young man
ever since. His father was a rising star among southern architects
when he killed himself, and Richard has followed in his father's
footsteps as an architecture student at Georgia Tech. Still, the
mystery of his father's death will not leave him alone, and the
mystery soon becomes an obsession.
Meanwhile, with the help of his father's friend, Tanny, he
labors with clever, almost maniacal passion to build a replica of
the magnificent, airy cabin his father had designed, built, and
perished in. So much of Richard's character has been shaped in some
way by the night his father died. Now, Tanny might be a guiding
light for young Richard as he searches for answers.
Along with Tanny, Richard has his girlfriend Lefay, an ex-hippie
turned corporate executive who calls him Reason. Even with the help
of friends, however, Richard has trouble keeping a grasp on
reality. He digs deeper and deeper into his father's life, but he
might soon find spending so much time in the past brings disaster
upon the present.
This book provides a comprehensive examination of the police role
from within a broader philosophical context. Contending that the
police are in the midst of an identity crisis that exacerbates
unjustified law enforcement tactics, Luke William Hunt examines
various major conceptions of the police-those seeing them as
heroes, warriors, and guardians. The book looks at the police role
considering the overarching societal goal of justice and seeks to
present a synthetic theory that draws upon history, law, society,
psychology, and philosophy. Each major conception of the police
role is examined in light of how it affects the pursuit of justice,
and how it may be contrary to seeking justice holistically and
collectively. The book sets forth a conception of the police role
that is consistent with the basic values of a constitutional
democracy in the liberal tradition. Hunt's intent is that
clarifying the police role will likewise elucidate any constraints
upon policing strategies, including algorithmic strategies such as
predictive policing. This book is essential reading for thoughtful
policing and legal scholars as well as those interested in
political philosophy, political theory, psychology, and related
areas. Now more than ever, the nature of the police role is a
philosophical topic that is relevant not just to police officials
and social scientists, but to everyone.
In Evil and Many Worlds: A Free-Will Theodicy, William Hunt
presents a unique approach to explaining how God and evil can
coexist despite the abundance of moral and natural evils blighting
our world, which imply that an omnibenevolent God is unlikely to
exist. This theodicy is based upon Huw Everett III's many-worlds
interpretation of quantum mechanics, whereby reality is not what it
intuitively seems; instead, it is a multiverse comprising a vast
number of universes, and we simultaneously exist in many of them.
This multiplicity of existence results in a balance of moral good
and evil across the multiverse, and through this, the expression of
free will-an attribute valued by both persons and God- flourishes.
The theodicy explains the coexistence of God and natural evil
through the necessity of an evolutionary process that ensures the
emergence of free-willed persons. Notwithstanding this universal
perspective of Creation, a resurrection possibility would mitigate
individual suffering resulting from this divine holistic strategy.
Hunt examines this possibility in light of the many-worlds
interpretation.
God, Probability and Life after Death reveals its objective in its
title, namely, to present an exploratory argument concerning the
probability of human resurrection. The exploratory argument follows
a probabilistic passage along an evidential trail to the discovery
of the probability of life after death. It is a trail that the
reader can personally engage with in order to reach their own
conclusion and even introduce additional evidence they think
relevant. The argument begins with the probability of the existence
of God, and once a position is established on this issue, the
argument becomes empowered for the next stage, which is to address
the evidence for human resurrection, namely, the Resurrection of
Jesus, near-death experiences and apparitions. The probabilistic
relationship between the evidence and the resurrection hypothesis
is critically examined throughout the book by engaging the
potential views of an atheist and agnostic in addition to that of a
theist. On this probabilistic journey, other issues relevant to the
resurrection argument are introduced, such as personal identity and
the possibility of resurrection given the nature of our world.
Evidence and argument for a non-supernatural possibility for human
resurrection are also considered. Significantly, the author does
not assume the normal spiritual approach to human resurrection,
when a disembodied soul leaves the body to continue a spiritual
existence in a ghostly realm. Instead, a materialistic approach is
taken, whereby the resurrected person survives in bodily form in a
physical realm. The use of probability theory is intended to keep
the evidential argument within the bounds of coherent reasoning. It
also enables the argument to link one piece of evidence to the next
in a probabilistic sequence that eventually leads to the conclusion
that human resurrection is not only possible, it is also very
likely.
This book provides a comprehensive examination of the police role
from within a broader philosophical context. Contending that the
police are in the midst of an identity crisis that exacerbates
unjustified law enforcement tactics, Luke William Hunt examines
various major conceptions of the police-those seeing them as
heroes, warriors, and guardians. The book looks at the police role
considering the overarching societal goal of justice and seeks to
present a synthetic theory that draws upon history, law, society,
psychology, and philosophy. Each major conception of the police
role is examined in light of how it affects the pursuit of justice,
and how it may be contrary to seeking justice holistically and
collectively. The book sets forth a conception of the police role
that is consistent with the basic values of a constitutional
democracy in the liberal tradition. Hunt's intent is that
clarifying the police role will likewise elucidate any constraints
upon policing strategies, including algorithmic strategies such as
predictive policing. This book is essential reading for thoughtful
policing and legal scholars as well as those interested in
political philosophy, political theory, psychology, and related
areas. Now more than ever, the nature of the police role is a
philosophical topic that is relevant not just to police officials
and social scientists, but to everyone.
This volume presents a complex portrait of the United States of
America grappling with the trials of national adolescence. Topics
include (but are not limited to): the dynamics of language and
power, the treachery of memory, the lived experience of racial and
economic inequality, the aesthetics of Indigeneity, the radical
possibilities of disability, the fluidity of gender and sexuality,
the depth and culture-making power of literary genre, the history
of poetics, the cult of performance, and the hidden costs of
foodways. Taken together, the essays offer a vision of a vibrant,
contradictory, and conflicted early US Republic resistant to
consensus accountings and poised to inform new and better origin
stories for the polity to come.
James Gairdner (1828 1912) was one of the foremost authorities of
his day on the Tudor period. This magisterial four-volume survey
(originally published 1908 1913) argues that the impetus for the
English Reformation came from the Lollard movement of the late
fourteenth century. A prolific researcher and editor, Gairdner
devoted his career to English history, and his study is both
meticulous and factually sound. His critics, however, were quick to
observe that the Lollard hypothesis was tenuous, and this mature
work is most valuable today to those interested in the history of
Reformation scholarship. Published in 1913, Volume 4 focuses on the
first year of the reign of Mary Tudor and her marriage to Philip of
Spain. Left unfinished on the death of the author, the book was
completed by the Reverend William Hunt and includes a preface
outlining Gairdner's life and career.
There is a growing sense that many liberal states are in the midst
of a shift in legal and political norms - a shift that is happening
slowly and for a variety of security-related reasons. The internet
and tech booms that are paving the way for new forms of electronic
surveillance predated the 9/11 attacks by several years, while the
police's vast use of secret informants and deceptive operations
began well before that. On the other hand, the recent uptick in
reactionary movements - movements in which the rule of law seems
expendable - began many years after 9/11 and continues to this day.
In The Retrieval of Liberalism in Policing, Luke William Hunt
provides an account of how policing in liberal societies has become
illiberal, in light of both internal and external threats to
security. Hunt provides an examination of the moral limits on
modern police practices that flow from the basic legal and
philosophical tenets of the liberal tradition, arguing that
policing in liberal states is constrained by a liberal conception
of persons coupled with particular principles of the rule of law.
Part I lays out the book's theoretical foundation, beginning with
an overview of the police's law enforcement role in the liberal
polity and a methodology for evaluating that role. Part II
addresses applications of that theory, including the police's use
of informants, deceptive operations, and surveillance. Hunt
concludes by emphasizing how the liberal conception of persons and
the rule of law constrain policing from multiple foundational
stances, making the key point that policing in liberal societies
has become illiberal in light of its response to both internal and
external threats to security. Overall, this book provides an
account of what it might mean to retrieve policing that is
consistent with the basic tenets of liberalism and the limits
imposed by those tenets.
|
|