John Rawls Orden de los libros
John Rawls fue una figura destacada de la filosofía moral y política cuya obra magna es considerada un texto fundamental en el campo. Su trabajo parte del argumento de que los principios de justicia más razonables son aquellos que todos aceptarían desde una posición justa. Rawls emplea experimentos mentales, como el famoso velo de la ignorancia, para establecer acuerdos justos donde todos se sitúan imparcialmente como iguales, determinando así los principios de la justicia social. Su pensamiento ayudó a una generación a reavivar la fe en la democracia misma.







- 2020
- 2015
Theodore Bayley Hardy VC DSO MC
- 144 páginas
- 6 horas de lectura
In 1916, at the age of fifty four, a slight, short sighted, unassuming country vicar and local school master became an Army Chaplain. Theodore Bayley Hardy was destined to become the most decorated non-combatant in the First World War, he was to be awarded the Victoria Cross, the D.S.O., and the M.C. By day he performed the usual priestly and cha
- 2010
A Brief Inquiry into the Meaning of Sin and Faith
- 288 páginas
- 11 horas de lectura
John Rawls never published anything about his own religious beliefs, but after his death two texts were discovered which shed light on the subject. The present volume includes these two texts, together with an Introduction that discusses their relation to Rawls’s published work, and an essay that places them theological context.
- 2010
- 2008
Offers readers an account of the liberal political tradition from a scholar viewed by many as the greatest contemporary exponent of the philosophy behind that tradition.
- 2001
The Law of Peoples
- 210 páginas
- 8 horas de lectura
This work consists of two parts: 'The Idea of Public Reason Revisited', published in 1997, and 'The Law of Peoples', a reworking of an article published in 1993. Taken together, they are the culmination of more than 50 years of reflection on liberalism and on some pressing problems of our times. schovat popis
- 2001
Justice as fairness : a restatement
- 240 páginas
- 9 horas de lectura
This book originated as lectures for a course on political philosophy that Rawls taught regularly at Harvard in the 1980s. In time the lectures became a restatement of his theory of justice as fairness, revised in light of his more recent papers and his treatise Political Liberalism (1993). As Rawls writes in the preface, the restatement presents "in one place an account of justice as fairness as I now see it, drawing on all [my previous] works." He offers a broad overview of his main lines of thought and also explores specific issues never before addressed in any of his writings.Rawls is well aware that since the publication of A Theory of Justice in 1971, American society has moved farther away from the idea of justice as fairness. Yet his ideas retain their power and relevance to debates in a pluralistic society about the meaning and theoretical viability of liberalism. This book demonstrates that moral clarity can be achieved even when a collective commitment to justice is uncertain.
- 2000
A collection of the lectures on moral philosophy given by John Rawls over three decades of teaching at Harvard. This book looks at thinkers such as Leibniz, Hume and Kant, in their struggle to define the role of a moral conception in human life. schovat popis
- 1999
A Theory of Justice, Revised Edition
- 560 páginas
- 20 horas de lectura
An alternative cover edition for this ISBN can be found here. Since it appeared in 1971, John Rawls’s A Theory of Justice has become a classic. The author has now revised the original edition to clear up a number of difficulties he and others have found in the original book. Rawls aims to express an essential part of the common core of the democratic tradition—justice as fairness—and to provide an alternative to utilitarianism, which had dominated the Anglo-Saxon tradition of political thought since the nineteenth century. Rawls substitutes the ideal of the social contract as a more satisfactory account of the basic rights and liberties of citizens as free and equal persons. “Each person,” writes Rawls, “possesses an inviolability founded on justice that even the welfare of society as a whole cannot override.” Advancing the ideas of Rousseau, Kant, Emerson, and Lincoln, Rawls’s theory is as powerful today as it was when first published.
- 1999
This book consists of two parts: the essay "The Idea of Public Reason Revisited," first published in 1997, and "The Law of Peoples," a major reworking of a much shorter article by the same name published in 1993. Taken together, they are the culmination of more than fifty years of reflection by John Rawls on liberalism and on some of the most pressing problems of our times



