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This collection of original essays pays tribute to Joseph Raz's enormous influence in contemporary moral, political, and legal philosophy, and engages with numerous debates on which he had a profound impact, such as: Normativity and Values, Practical Reasoning, Agency and Autonomy, Rights and Obligations, The Public Domain, and Authority.

Produktbeschreibung
This collection of original essays pays tribute to Joseph Raz's enormous influence in contemporary moral, political, and legal philosophy, and engages with numerous debates on which he had a profound impact, such as: Normativity and Values, Practical Reasoning, Agency and Autonomy, Rights and Obligations, The Public Domain, and Authority.
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Autorenporträt
Andrei Marmor is the Jacob Gould Schurman Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Law at Cornell University. Prior to joining Cornell in 2015, he was Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Law at the University of Southern California. His research interests span philosophy of law, moral, social and political philosophy, and philosophy of language. Marmor published seven monographs with Oxford and Princeton university presses, and a number of edited volumes. His books and articles also appeared in numerous translations, including in Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, Turkish, Farsi, Hebrew, Japanese, Korean, and Italian. Kimberley Brownlee holds the Canada Research Chair in Ethics and Political & Social Philosophy at the University of British Columbia. She received her DPhil from Oxford University (Rhodes Scholar). She is a Commonwealth Scholar and Fulbright Research Chair. Her current work focuses on loneliness, belonging, social human rights, and freedom of association. Her other work focuses on conscience, civil disobedience, punishment, and restorative justice. She is the author of Being Sure of Each Other (OUP, 2020) and Conscience and Conviction: The Case for Civil Disobedience (OUP, 2012). She is the co-editor of Being Social: The Philosophy of Social Human Rights (OUP, 2022), The Blackwell Companion to Applied Philosophy (2016) and Disability and Disadvantage (OUP, 2009). David Enoch studies law and philosophy at Tel Aviv University, and received his PhD in philosophy at NYU in 2003. He's been a professor at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, on a joint appointment in law and philosophy, ever since. Recently, he started as the Professor of the Philosophy of Law at Oxford. He works primarily in moral, political, and legal philosophy.