PrefaceAbbreviationsCh. 1Introduction3Pt. IThe Nature of Judgment21Ch. 2Aesthetic Judgment23Ch. 3Moral Judgment32Ch. 4Judgment and Freedom64Pt. IIThe Politics of Judgment89Ch. 5Proper Pleasures91Ch. 6The Wealth of Nations (I): Judgment120Ch. 7The Wealth of Nations (II): Virtue and Independence140Ch. 8The Wealth of Nations (III): Helping the Poor161Ch. 9Kant's Politics, Rawls's Politics (I): The Public Use of Judgment184Ch. 10Kant's Politics, Rawls's Politics (II): Talent, Industry, and Luck215Pt. IIIThe Freedom of Judgment241Ch. 11A Third Concept of Liberty243Notes279Index329
Samuel Fleischacker's aim is to defend a liberal political philosophy by linking up both Aristotle and Kant with themes in Adam Smith. His commentaries on these sources are extremely sophisticated and illuminating contributions to the existing literatures. What Fleischacker has to offer, however, is not merely commentary, but also insights of his own that are rigorous, thoughtful, elegantly articulated, and well-grounded in the best of contemporary philosophy. -- Ronald Beiner, University of Toronto An impressive and interesting work. Its main strengths are the subtle and original interpretations of the theory and practice of judgment in the work of Kant and Adam Smith--not to mention the surprising, but very interesting and plausible way in which the author integrates their ideas. -- Bernard Yack, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Samuel Fleischacker is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Illinois, Chicago and the author of Integrity and Moral Relativism and The Ethics of Culture.
"Samuel Fleischacker's aim is to defend a liberal political
philosophy by linking up both Aristotle and Kant with themes in
Adam Smith. His commentaries on these sources are extremely
sophisticated and illuminating contributions to the existing
literatures. What Fleischacker has to offer, however, is not merely
commentary, but also insights of his own that are rigorous,
thoughtful, elegantly articulated, and well-grounded in the best of
contemporary philosophy."—Ronald Beiner, University of Toronto
"An impressive and interesting work. Its main strengths are the
subtle and original interpretations of the theory and practice of
judgment in the work of Kant and Adam Smith—not to mention the
surprising, but very interesting and plausible way in which the
author integrates their ideas."—Bernard Yack, University of
Wisconsin-Madison
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