6 research outputs found

    Introduction: How Can Property Be Political?

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    The Environment: Private or Common Property?

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    Which Anthropocene is it to be? Beyond geology to a moral and public discourse

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    ‱The Anthropocene goes beyond geology and needs a moral and public discourse ‱Anthropocene science needs a genuine and real synthesis ‱Anthropocene science requires strategically designed researc

    The fables of pity: Rousseau, Mandeville and the animal-fable

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    Copyright @ 2012 Edinburgh University PressPrompted by Derrida’s work on the animal-fable in eighteenth-century debates about political power, this article examines the role played by the fiction of the animal in thinking of pity as either a natural virtue (in Rousseau’s Second Discourse) or as a natural passion (in Mandeville’s The Fable of the Bees). The war of fables between Rousseau and Mandeville – and their hostile reception by Samuel Johnson and Adam Smith – reinforce that the animal-fable illustrates not so much the proper of man as the possibilities and limitations of a moral philosophy that is unable to address the political realities of the state

    'This Habitable Earth of Ours': Locke on Humanity in the Environment

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    The Anthropocene Biosphere : Supporting ‘Open Interdisciplinarity’ through Blogging

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    This paper describes a process of ‘open’ interdisciplinary scholarship. Researchers from across the University of Oklahoma blogged about a recent paper by ecologist Erle Ellis, and met in person to discuss posts. They then hosted Ellis for a seminar on questions that emerged, and for a public panel discussion
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