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006 m o d |
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008 200713s2007 xx o ||||0 eng d
020 9789048502080|q(electronic bk.)
020 |z9789085553915
035 (MiAaPQ)EBC419766
035 (Au-PeEL)EBL419766
035 (CaPaEBR)ebr10302630
035 (CaONFJC)MIL119125
035 (OCoLC)437106756
040 MiAaPQ|beng|erda|epn|cMiAaPQ|dMiAaPQ
050 4 BJ1471 -- .S35 2007eb
082 0 200
100 1 Schinkel, Anders
245 10 Conscience and Conscientious Objections
264 1 Amsterdam :|bAmsterdam University Press,|c2007
264 4 |c©2007
300 1 online resource (638 pages)
336 text|btxt|2rdacontent
337 computer|bc|2rdamedia
338 online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier
505 0 Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- General Introduction --
About this book -- Reality, consciousness, and language --
The theory of symbols -- Method -- Part 1 -- 1: The symbol
of conscience -- Introduction -- Preliminary understanding
of conscience -- The Emergence of the symbol -- Core
elements of the symbol of conscience -- Some imaginative
symbols -- 2: Between symbol and doctrine: the
conceptualization of conscience untill the early Middle
Ages -- Introduction -- From compactness to
differentiation -- Concluding remarks -- 3: Between symbol
and doctrine: differentiation and doctrinalization - the
religious conscience before and after the Reformation --
Introduction -- From compactness to differentiation --
From symbol to doctrine - and back? Conscience in
Renaissance and Reformation -- Concluding remarks -- 4:
Between symbol and doctrine: the first wave of criticism -
the seventeenth century -- Introduction -- Thomes Hobbes
on Conscience, metaphor, and the abuse of language -- John
Locke -- Influence -- 5: Between symbol and doctrine:
Conscience grounded in Nature and Reason -- Conscience as
a faculty -- Conscience as an agent of the perfection of
man and society -- Evaluation: prospects for the new
conscience -- Some notes on the romantic conscience -- 6:
Between symbol and doctrine: the second wave of criticism
- the nineteenth century -- Preparations: from 'Nature' to
'Nurture' -- Jeremy Bentham -- Charles Darwin -- Sigmund
Freud -- Concluding remarks -- 7: Twentieth-century
concepts of conscience -- Introduction -- Gilbert Ryle --
Niklas Luhmann -- Concluding remarks -- 8: A fluid concept
of conscience -- The symbol and concept of conscience --
Conscience as a mode of consci ousness -- The development
of conscience as an education towards openness -- Ultimate
concern -- Conscience, luminosity, and intentionality
505 8 The moral quality of our own contribution to the process
of reality -- Conscience and experience -- Part 2 --
Transition to part 2 -- 9: Conscience and freedom of
conscience -- Introduction -- How conscience and freedom
of conscience were related -- Where conscience and freedom
of conscience part -- 10: The problem of order --
Introduction -- The first dimension: political order --
The second dimension: the ordered mind -- Concluding
remarks -- 11: Between idealism and pragmatism --
Introduction -- Dynamics of order: between idealism and
pragmatism -- 12: Solutions to the problem of order --
Introduction -- Before Luhmann -- Luhmann and after -- How
to understand freedom of conscience -- Concluding remarks
-- Part 3 -- Transition to part 3: Conscientious objection
-- 13: Identifying conscientious objections -- Wheter only
conscientious objection understoon and expressed as such
can be identified as conscientious objection -- Core
elements of the symbol of conscience as indicators of the
conscientiousness of objections -- Identifiers of
conscientious objection, on the public level -- Concluding
remarks -- 14: Conscie ntious objection, the state, and
the law -- Introduction -- The critical function of
conscientious objection and the contingent character of
positive law -- Conscientious objection and state power --
Conscientious objection as a 'legal pressure valve' --
Concluding remarks -- Ch. 15: Two case studies --
Introduction -- Military conscription in the Netherlands -
- the last ten years -- Conscientious Objections and gay
marriage -- Concluding remarks -- Ch. 16: Philosophical
foundations of conscientious objection -- The burden of
justification -- What conscientious objections are -- What
sets conscientious objections apart from other kinds of
objections -- Why conscientious objections deserve special
respect and treatment
505 8 The differentiation between my approach to conscientious
objection and other approaches -- Concluding remarks --
References -- Samenvatting (Dutch summary)
520 About the philosophy of consentious objections
588 Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other
sources
590 Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
Ebook Central, 2020. Available via World Wide Web. Access
may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated
libraries
650 0 Conscience.;Conscientious objection
655 4 Electronic books
776 08 |iPrint version:|aSchinkel, Anders|tConscience and
Conscientious Objections|dAmsterdam : Amsterdam University
Press,c2007|z9789085553915
856 40 |uhttps://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/sinciatw/
detail.action?docID=419766|zClick to View