The Real Possibility of Justice Utility: How Systems with it Come to be and are Maintained

2011 ◽  
pp. 277-331
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 185-232
Author(s):  
Carlos A. Ball

This chapter explores the ways in which some progressives, in the years leading up to Trump’s election, had grown skeptical of expansive First Amendment protections, viewing them as impediments to the pursuit of equality objectives. Although some of that skepticism is understandable, the chapter details the multiple ways in which free speech and free press protections helped curtail some of Trump’s autocratic policies and practices. In doing so, the chapter argues that progressives, going forward, should not allow what it calls “First Amendment skepticism” to grow to the point that it undermines the amendment’s ability to shield democratic processes, dissenters, and vulnerable groups from future autocratic government officials in the Trump mold. The chapter ends with an exploration of future hate speech regulations. While it would be understandable for progressives, after Trump’s repeated use of hate speech, to call for greater regulations of such speech, the chapter urges progressives to be cautious in this area because of the real possibility that the regulations will be used by future government officials in the Trump mold to target and discriminate against both progressive viewpoints and racial and religious minorities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 75 (10) ◽  
pp. 564-574
Author(s):  
Peet J Van der Vyver ◽  
Martin Vorster ◽  
Casper H Jonker

Once root canal treatment is considered, the treating clinicians must be aware of the real possibility that complications and unforeseen accidents can occur during any stage of the treatment. Complications and accidents may include instrument separation, root perforation on different levels and ledge formation.


Author(s):  
Pedro Henrique Maia Costa ◽  
Susane de Almeida Aranha Costa ◽  
Amanda Alves Fecury ◽  
Carla Viana Dendasck ◽  
Euzébio de Oliveira ◽  
...  

Our Federal Constitution of 1988 placed Education as a Fundamental Right in the list of social rights. One of the purposes of Education is to ensure and prepare the student for the exercise of the citizen. The proposals highlighted do not have the purpose of forming a bachelor’s degree in law, but rather a conscious citizen, who recognizes his basic rights and duties before society and the State. The objective of this research is to verify the real possibility of introducing the study of the Federal Constitution (CF) in the IFAP, based on the knowledge of these students about basic understandings about the Federal Constitution. Structured questionnaires were used with closed and open questions, of a dissertation character and others of objective character, applied in January 2018 to the participants involved, with the help of Google Forms. The Brazilian High School, examined from a punctual cut in the technical course in buildings in the integralized form of the IFAP, Macapá campus, cannot comply with the recommendations of the CF and the LDB according to the result of the questionnaire applied to the students. This teaching occupies a privileged place in the Brazilian educational formation, between the elementary and the higher. Students show to be enthusiastic about the possibility of implementing basic scans in the technical course in buildings at IFAP, Macapá campus, even if optionally.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 394-403
Author(s):  
Hartwig Wiedebach

Hermann Cohen's Logic of Pure Knowledge and G. W. F. Hegel's Science of Logic each use in their way the means of thought of negation and contradiction to unfold the philosophical dynamic: a fragile interplay between self-endangerment and self-preservation of thought. Here, the proximity and difference of the two authors are extended. The proximity lies in methodological negativism. The difference is in the significance of the principle of continuity. According to Cohen and Hegel as well, thinking proceeds exclusively, as Kant called it, synthetically. The exclusion of contradiction, limited to analytical judgments, has only marginal significance. But the commonality does not eliminate the differences. As Hegel puts it, contradiction is a principle of mediation and finally results in "self-dissolution"; it carries within itself a direction of logical "reconciliation." Per Cohen, contradiction is a principle of "annihilation" (annihilatio) of approaches to a determination that threatens any form of "identity." The turn Hegel put in contradiction itself, regarding in it a unity of positivity and negativity, has no direct counterpart in Cohen. Nevertheless, for him, too, the "judgment of contradiction" becomes the active basis of all cognitive thought. By exercising a contradiction-destroying "activity," the judgment of contradiction "protects," indeed "generates," the real possibility of cognition. The annihilation of the non-identical sets free the fundamental "judgment of origin" with which cognition finds its beginning. The principle of continuity taken over from Leibniz corresponds to it. Just this principle has now again no direct correspondence with Hegel.


Kant-Studien ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 112 (3) ◽  
pp. 343-371
Author(s):  
Christian Onof

Abstract What does Kant claim to have shown in the Resolution of the Third Antinomy (RTA)? A recent publication by Bernd Ludwig shows the shortcomings of a fairly broad interpretative consensus around the claim that all that is at stake in the RTA is the mode of logical possibility. I argue that there is a lack of clarity as to what logical possibility, and that the real possibility of transcendental freedom (TF) is examined in much of the RTA. Ludwig’s own proposal that Kant shows the real possibility of TF however faces major problems. I formulate an alternative proposal that pays due attention to the claim of the antinomy’s thesis, the evolution of the argument of the RTA, and Kant’s later textual references to it. This also deals with the thorny issue of the relation between practical and TF.


Free Traders ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 139-162
Author(s):  
Malcolm Fairbrother

Previous chapters argued that the private sector in all three countries was united in support of CUFTA and NAFTA. From some perspectives, this fact is puzzling: different industries have different interests, and some stand to lose out from free trade. How then was such broad-based business support for North American free trade possible? This chapter shows the business support followed from the national negotiators’ providing potential opponents with opportunities to shape the contents of the free trade agreements. The real possibility of winning meaningful concessions gave opponents a reason not to oppose free trade as a whole. But while these concessions served a purpose domestically, they also aggravated conflicts internationally. These conflicts reinforced nationalist understandings of trade that contradicted economists’ views, as discussed in Chapter 6.


2019 ◽  
pp. 308-338
Author(s):  
Carolyn Hoyle ◽  
Mai Sato

This concluding chapter summarises the book's key findings and examines the main cultural and structural influences on the Criminal Cases Review Commission's decision-making. It begins with a discussion of three significant changes to the Commission's ‘surround’: reductions in legal aid for defendants and appellants; growing evidence of non-disclosure of potentially exculpatory evidence by police and prosecution; and the declining reliability of forensic science evidence. The chapter then considers the critics' claim that the Commission's referral rate is too low and how this raises concerns about access to justice, along with developments in the surround in relation to the ‘field’ and the ‘frame’. It also analyses variability in the Commission's response to cases and its relationship with various ‘stakeholders’. Finally, it looks at the notion that the Commission is too ‘deferential’ to the Court of Appeal when it comes to making decisions about which cases meet the ‘real possibility test’.


Author(s):  
Harriet E. Baber

According to preferentism, the ‘desire theory’ of well-being, one is made better off to the extent that her preferences, or desires, are satisfied. According to narrow preferentism, preferentism as it has traditionally been understood, the preferences that matter in this regard are just actual preferences; preferences we might ‘easily have had’, do not matter. On this account also, only actual preference satisfaction contributes to well-being. Merely possible preference satisfaction, including the ‘real possibility’ of attaining desired states of affairs, does not contribute to well-being. Broad preferentism makes sense of the intuition that feasibility as such contributes to well-being. On this account, we are made better off not only by the actual satisfaction of our actual preferences but also by the mere feasibility of satisfying preferences that we ‘might easily have had’. In addition to making sense of our intuition that feasibility as such, contributes to our well-being, broad preferentism provides a rationale for altruistic behavior. On this account support policies that benefit worldmates whose actual circumstances are different from our own because their circumstances are the our circumstances at nearby possible worlds, and our circumstances at other possible worlds, affect our own actual well-being.


2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 172-185
Author(s):  
Jason A. Mahn

With the “return of the virtues” in theology and church practice, Christians seek to develop dispositions that make moral excellence more likely. By contrast, the writings of Søren Kierkegaard, though retrieved by virtue ethicists, develop dispositions (anxiety, self-doubt, the real possibility of offense) that lead to self-conflict and make virtue more difficult. If Kierkegaard does develop virtue, he most closely resembles Stanley Hauerwas, who suggests that virtue makes conflict and moral failure increasingly possible. In this essay, I read Kierkegaard through Hauerwas in order to trace a peculiar version of Christian training and to question assumptions about the immediate benefit of religious formation.


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