372 research outputs found
Denying reciprocity
When individuals receive benefits as a result of the burdens assumed by other people, they are expected to make a return in similar form. To do otherwise is considered as a failure to treat those other people with appropriate respect. It is this which justifies the expectation that individuals share in the labour that is necessary to preserve just institutions and productive practices that characterise complex schemes of social cooperation. In this paper, I argue that where benefits do not meet thresholds specifying the expected function and efficacy of those benefits, this does not simply issue in a ādownward adjustmentā in the work expectations and reciprocal demands that are made of people. Rather, it legitimates refusal to engage in productive labour even where limited benefits are still being received. Other costs and obligations emerge that contribute to the creation of disruptive political, economic and social associations. These not only replace the demands of reciprocity but actively target and disrupt the practices and exchanges that give form to reciprocity
Recommended from our members
"The dearest of our possessions": applying Floridi's information privacy concept in models of information behavior and information literacy
This conceptual paper argues for the value of an approach to privacy in the digital information environment informed by Luciano Floridi's philosophy of information and information ethics. This approach involves achieving informational privacy, through the features of anonymity and obscurity, through an optimal balance of ontological frictions. This approach may be used to modify models for information behavior and for information literacy, giving them a fuller and more effective coverage of privacy issues in the infosphere. For information behavior, the Information Seeking and Communication Model, and the Information Grounds conception, are most appropriate for this purpose. For information literacy, the metaliteracy model, using a modification a privacy literacy framework, is most suitable
Mediation in the Law Curriculum
Cited by Lord Neuberger in āEducating Future Mediatorsā at the 4th Civil Mediation Council National Conference, May 201
A tale of two capitalisms: preliminary spatial and historical comparisons of homicide rates in Western Europe and the USA
This article examines comparative homicide rates in the United States and Western Europe in an era of increasingly globalized neoliberal economics. The main finding of this preliminary analysis is that historical and spatial correlations between distinct forms of political economy and homicide rates are consistent enough to suggest that social democratic regimes are more successful at fostering the socio-cultural conditions necessary for reduced homicide rates. Thus Western Europe and all continents and nations should approach the importation of American neo-liberal economic policies with extreme caution. The article concludes by suggesting that the indirect but crucial causal connection between political economy and homicide rates, prematurely pushed into the background of criminological thought during the ācultural turnā, should be returned to the foreground
Of āslutsā and āarseholesā: Antagonistic desire and the production of sexual vigilance
This article examines a contemporary antagonism in gendered safety discoursesāthe imperative to be free in public space against the obligation to be safe and āproperlyā feminine. We argue that this produces (and is produced by) contemporary rape culture, which might be contested through recourse to an agonistic ethic. Using qualitative interview data, we examine how participants contest victim-blaming discourses, while limiting how far they will accept the female bodyās right to occupy public space. This article has significant implications for approaching social justice, in particular justice for women and their right to occupy public space
The Grizzly, May 5, 1992
Smells Like Summer ā¢ Psychology Conference a Success ā¢ Whitians Recognize Honor Students ā¢ Theatre Workshop Presentations ā¢ Lily Redner Speaks: Lessons of The Holocaust ā¢ Record Review: Tori Amos ā¢ Movie Review: Death Stalker II ā¢ Senior Reflection Special: A Look Back on the Last Four Years; Most Memorable Moments at Ursinus ā¢ The Knowledge of Experience ā¢ Valete Ursini ā¢ Medinger Pottery Exhibit Opens ā¢ On Government and the People ā¢ America the Innocent ā¢ Letter: Wismer Abuses ā¢ Ursinus Joins All-Sports Conference ā¢ Breakdown on NBA \u2792 ā¢ Women\u27s LAX Snag MAC Title, End Seasonhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1297/thumbnail.jp
GRB 090618: The First Example of a Neutron Star Gravitational Collapse to a Black Hole Induced by a Type Ib/c Supernova
A novel concept has been recently proposed for explaining the temporal
coincidence of some Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) with an associated Supernova (SN)
in terms of the gravitational collapse of a neutron star (NS) to a Black Hole
(BH), induced by a type Ib/c SN explosion. We apply these considerations to the
exceptional case of GRB 090618, for which there is evidence of a SN
days after the GRB occurrence. We calculate the accretion rate and total
accreted mass onto a NS from a SN Ib/c originated from a companion evolved
star. It is shown that the NS reaches in a few seconds the critical mass and
undergoes gravitational collapse to a BH leading to the emission of a GRB. We
find for the mass of the NS companion, , and for the SN core
progenitor, , the following mass ranges: and . Finally,
we discuss the complementarity of these considerations to alternative processes
explaining long and short GRBs.Comment: A&A Letters, accepte
Individual Liberty and the Importance of the Concept of the People
UID/FIL/00183/2013Through publically agreed laws that correspond to a common set of public restrictions, the āpeople as a sovereign bodyā serves to protect against violations of individual liberty and despotic power. Where no such common body exists, individuals are deprived of this protection. In such cases, individuals must obey without liberty, while those in power command under a state of license. Neoliberal theorists maintain that any common personality, with its corresponding set of public and arbitrary positive and negative restrictions on liberty, undermines individual liberty. Neoliberal theory only allows for private restrictions on liberty. Against these neoliberal assumptions, we argue that rejecting public restrictions on liberty does not promote individual liberty. To the 1į¢« į¢¬ į¢ į¢® 1 contrary, it creates conditions in which free individuals become servile and political inequality becomes entrenched, where citizens are divided into those who obey and those who command. Tracing the consequences of neoliberalism, we argue that unless we take seriously both the people as a political category and the right to equal and reciprocal coercion, individual liberty will be at risk. We also argue that neoliberalism ultimately leads to the total exclusion of certain citizens under the veil of full liberty. With the vanishing of the peopleās will comes the utter disappearance of certain citizens, who live in the spontaneous society as if they were stateless or lawless persons. To better understand the connections between the rejection of the concept of the people, private restrictions on liberty and the fostering of the servile citizen, this paper considers the political philosophy of Hayek and Nozick. It also considers key ideas from Locke and Kantātheorists who, despite the differences between their philosophical perspectives, and despite the fact that they both provided crucial inspiration for Hayekās political economy and Nozickās libertarianism, stressed the protective role of the people with regard to individual liberty.publishersversionpublishe
Wild Animals in Our Backyard. A Contextual Approach to the Intrinsic Value of Animals
As a reflection on recent debates on the value of wild animals we examine the question of the intrinsic value of wild animals in both natural and man-made surroundings. We examine the concepts being wild and domesticated. In our approach we consider animals as dependent on their environment, whether it is a human or a natural environment. Stressing this dependence we argue that a distinction can be made between three different interpretations of a wild animalās intrinsic value: a species-specific, a naturalistic, and an individualistic interpretation. According to the species-specific approach, the animal is primarily considered as a member of its species; according to the naturalistic interpretation, the animal is seen as dependent on the natural environment; and according to the individualistic approach, the animal is seen in terms of its relationship to humans. In our opinion, the species-specific interpretation, which is the current dominant view, should be supplementedābut not replaced byānaturalistic and individualistic interpretations, which focus attention on the relationship of the animal to the natural and human environments, respectively. Which of these three interpretations is the most suitable in a given case depends on the circumstances and the opportunity for the animal to grow and develop according to its nature and capabilities
- ā¦