There are limits on the duty to tell the truth. Sometimes, because of the undesirable consequences of honesty, we are morally required not to reveal certain truths and can even be required to lie. In this article, we explore the implications of this uncontroversial claim for the practice of political philosophers. We argue that, given the consequences of misunderstandings and misrepresentations that might occur, political philosophers will sometimes be under a moral duty not to disseminate their research and, in highly exceptional cases, have a moral duty to lie outright
Normative legal philosophy primarily concerns itself with the task of understanding which weighty re...
On the one hand, most of us would take honesty to be a key ethical virtue. Corporations and other or...
Realism in political philosophy is usually understood as a position in debates about how political p...
There are limits on the duty to tell the truth. Sometimes, because of the undesirable consequences o...
There are limits on the duty to tell the truth. Sometimes, because of the undesirable consequences o...
When questioning whether political deception can be ethically warranted, two competing intuitions ju...
Which Conception of Truth Is Appropriate in Politics? The paper ”Which Conception of Truth Is Approp...
When questioning whether political deception can be ethically warranted, two competing intuitions ju...
Kant thought that one should never lie. Modern philosophers disagree, admitting its acceptability in...
This article deals with an aspect of the contemporary political crisis in Western countries, namely,...
Prof. Miščević has long been an ardent defender of the use of thought experiments in philosophy, for...
The traditional view holds that political philosophy should aim at the truth. By contrast, Avner de ...
This essay, a contribution to a symposium at Duquesne Law School entitled Resurrecting Truth in Amer...
Contemporary political discourse is awash with concerns about truthfulness, understood as the virtue...
Normative legal philosophy primarily concerns itself with the task of understanding which weighty re...
On the one hand, most of us would take honesty to be a key ethical virtue. Corporations and other or...
Realism in political philosophy is usually understood as a position in debates about how political p...
There are limits on the duty to tell the truth. Sometimes, because of the undesirable consequences o...
There are limits on the duty to tell the truth. Sometimes, because of the undesirable consequences o...
When questioning whether political deception can be ethically warranted, two competing intuitions ju...
Which Conception of Truth Is Appropriate in Politics? The paper ”Which Conception of Truth Is Approp...
When questioning whether political deception can be ethically warranted, two competing intuitions ju...
Kant thought that one should never lie. Modern philosophers disagree, admitting its acceptability in...
This article deals with an aspect of the contemporary political crisis in Western countries, namely,...
Prof. Miščević has long been an ardent defender of the use of thought experiments in philosophy, for...
The traditional view holds that political philosophy should aim at the truth. By contrast, Avner de ...
This essay, a contribution to a symposium at Duquesne Law School entitled Resurrecting Truth in Amer...
Contemporary political discourse is awash with concerns about truthfulness, understood as the virtue...
Normative legal philosophy primarily concerns itself with the task of understanding which weighty re...
On the one hand, most of us would take honesty to be a key ethical virtue. Corporations and other or...
Realism in political philosophy is usually understood as a position in debates about how political p...