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Revision as of 07:33, 16 July 2006 by Ste4k (talk | contribs) (better ref)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Social justice in the liberal state is a book written by Bruce A. Ackerman, a Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science at Yale, and the author of fifteen books that have had a broad influence in political philosophy, constitutional law, and public policy. The book is a new view of the theoretical foundations of liberalism that will challenge us to clarify our own implicit notions of liberal democracy. To Ackerman, liberalism is a kind of structured conversation in which verbal negotiation among those with differing visions of the good life is an alternative to the exercise of naked power. Ackerman has mounted a profound challenge to contract thinking. It works, crudely, on the idea that the premises of a course of contract reasoning can be manipulated so as to yield (more or less) any conclusion that the theorist has some antecedent interest in producing.
Reference
- Ackerman, Bruce A. (1980). Social justice in the liberal state. New Haven : Yale University Press. ISBN 0300024398.
- Yale Law School. "Faculty". Retrieved 2006-07-16.
- Book Review Desk (30 Nov1980). "NOTABLE BOOKS OF THE YEAR". Late City Final Edition. The New York Times. pp. 14, Column 1, Section 7.
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(help) - Bull, Barry L. (1992). "THE CREOLIZATION OF LIBERALISM". College of Education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved 2006-07-16.
- D'Agostino, Fred (8 Apr2003). "Contemporary Approaches to the Social Contract". Retrieved 2006-07-16.
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