Pettit endorses a ‘republican’ conception of social freedom of the person as consisting of a state of non-domination, and takes this to refute Mill’s ‘liberal’ claim that non-domineering but coercive interference can compromise social freedom of choice. This paper argues that Pettit’s interpretation is true to the extent that Mill believes that the legitimate, non-arbitrary and just coercion of would-be dominators, for the sake of preventing them from dominating others, can render them unfree to choose to do so without rendering them socially unfree (qua dominated) persons in their own right. However, contra Pettit, Mill is correct to reject the ‘republican’ view for at least two reasons. Firstly, it enables him to avoid commitment to the i...
Philip Pettit has used Isaiah Berlin's positive and negative freedom for two different purposes. Fir...
Introduction: In a recent paper, Philip Pettit (2001) argues that there are parallels between Sen’s ...
This article critically engages with Philip Pettit’s republican political philosophy, and with his r...
Pettit endorses a ‘republican’ conception of social freedom of the person as consisting of a state o...
This paper is structured into three sections. First, I will make a stylizedpresentation of the Berli...
Philip Pettit claims his neorepublican theory of freedom as non-domination is preferable to the libe...
What is political freedom? Many, especially liberal, philosophers have followed Isaiah Berlin in ins...
International audienceThis paper evaluates the compatibility of P. Pettit's definition of republican...
International audienceThis paper evaluates the compatibility of P. Pettit's definition of republican...
Institutions promoting republican freedom as non-domination are commonly believed to differ signific...
Much recent philosophical work on social freedom focuses on whether freedom should be understood as ...
Philip Pettit has made central to modern republican theory a distinctive account of freedom – republ...
One of the most interesting current debates about the ideal of freedom is the debate between the adh...
Philip Pettit’s conception of freedom as nondomination is modally robust in that it requires not sim...
© Bristol University Press 2019. In this paper, I bring Ernesto Laclau’s post-Marxist approach into ...
Philip Pettit has used Isaiah Berlin's positive and negative freedom for two different purposes. Fir...
Introduction: In a recent paper, Philip Pettit (2001) argues that there are parallels between Sen’s ...
This article critically engages with Philip Pettit’s republican political philosophy, and with his r...
Pettit endorses a ‘republican’ conception of social freedom of the person as consisting of a state o...
This paper is structured into three sections. First, I will make a stylizedpresentation of the Berli...
Philip Pettit claims his neorepublican theory of freedom as non-domination is preferable to the libe...
What is political freedom? Many, especially liberal, philosophers have followed Isaiah Berlin in ins...
International audienceThis paper evaluates the compatibility of P. Pettit's definition of republican...
International audienceThis paper evaluates the compatibility of P. Pettit's definition of republican...
Institutions promoting republican freedom as non-domination are commonly believed to differ signific...
Much recent philosophical work on social freedom focuses on whether freedom should be understood as ...
Philip Pettit has made central to modern republican theory a distinctive account of freedom – republ...
One of the most interesting current debates about the ideal of freedom is the debate between the adh...
Philip Pettit’s conception of freedom as nondomination is modally robust in that it requires not sim...
© Bristol University Press 2019. In this paper, I bring Ernesto Laclau’s post-Marxist approach into ...
Philip Pettit has used Isaiah Berlin's positive and negative freedom for two different purposes. Fir...
Introduction: In a recent paper, Philip Pettit (2001) argues that there are parallels between Sen’s ...
This article critically engages with Philip Pettit’s republican political philosophy, and with his r...