The meaning of an expression resides not in the expression itself but in the experience of a person's engagement with it. Meaning will be different not only to different people but also to the same person at different times. This book offers a way of attending to these different meanings. This way (or method) is a version of a trans-cultural activity that Richard Dawson calls attunement. The activity of attunement involves a movement of self-adjustment to a language, which a person transforms in her or his use of it. Consciously performing the activity can enable understanding of the processes…mehr
The meaning of an expression resides not in the expression itself but in the experience of a person's engagement with it. Meaning will be different not only to different people but also to the same person at different times. This book offers a way of attending to these different meanings. This way (or method) is a version of a trans-cultural activity that Richard Dawson calls attunement. The activity of attunement involves a movement of self-adjustment to a language, which a person transforms in her or his use of it. Consciously performing the activity can enable understanding of the processes by which we constitute ourselves and others when we use a language. This directly connects to the topic justice, which is concerned with constituting appropriate selves and relations. Justice as Attunement engages with a wide range of texts - legal, literary, economic, philosophical, among others - and illuminates many useful and fascinating connections between them. There is a sense in which this book transcends disciplinary boundaries, for, in addition to students and scholars of law, literature, economics, and philosophy, it is written to a general reader who is interested in reflecting on and doing justice to their experiences in life.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Richard Dawson has held teaching positions in economics, law, and politics and published work on the economic role of government, on colonization, and on literary dimensions of law.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword by Gary Watt Acknowledgements Table of Cases PROLOGUE Attunement to Attunement To a General Reader When a Lawyer Writes a Complaint: Herbert A. Eastman INTRODUCTION Attunement to and from James Boyd White: Hearing the Hearing Connecting Readers An Alphabetical Lexicon A Guide for Confusion: Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst College Quotations: Political Listening Pronouns ACTIVITY 'Questions of a Certain Sort': Michael Oakeshott 'Now I Know How to Go On': Ludwig Wittgenstein ALIENATION The 'Alienation Effect': Bertolt Brecht 'The Art of Placing Action at a Distance': Milner S. Ball ATTENTION The Love Rule: Simone Weil 'A Certain Negro Woman': Prigg v. Pennsylvania Economizing on Attention: Arjo Klamer ATTUNEMENT 'When One Learns a Distant Language': A. L. Becker 'Learning as Attunement': Frances Trix CHARACTER 'Prejudices': Edmund Burke's Reflections on the French Revolution 'Integrity': Jane Austen's Persuasion 'Rational Fools' and Homo Economicus: Amartya Sen CONSTITUTION 'An Entailed Inheritance': Edmund Burke's Reflections on the French Revolution 'WE THE PEOPLE' and McCulloch v. Maryland Reimagining South Africa's 'Transformative Constitution' CONVERSATION 'A Game with Hard Rules': David Tracy 'The Power of Conversation': Jane Austen's Persuasion 'The Longer Conversation': The Waitangi Tribunal 'By Challenging Your View of Economics': Peter E. Earl CULTURE 'Talking Past Each Other': Joan Metge 'The Tribe of Economics': Arjo Klamer EQUALITY 'Economic Power': John R. Commons and Holden v Hardy Speaking Truth to Power: Nelson Mandela Socratic Questioning: Clark D. Cunningham EXPERIENCE 'Beyond Our Own Circle': Jane Austen's Persuasion 'Every Freshman a Phoenix': Amherst Composition and Literary Criticism 'Genuine Limit-Situations': David Tracy 'I Jettisoned Chicago Economics': Leonard Rapping IMAGINATION 'In One Person Many People': William Shakespeare's King Richard II 'Maps of Sovereignty': Perry Dane on the Cherokee Nation Images of Images: Kenneth Boulding's The Image INTEGRATION 'An Integral Reality': Lon Fuller's Jurisprudence Modern Constitutional Diversity: James Tully's Strange Multiplicity JUDGEMENT 'When We Think About New Cases': Linda Ross Meyer 'The Source of This Court's Authority': Planned Parenthood v. Casey JUSTICE 'The Sole Arbiter of Its Own Justice': Wi Parata v. Bishop of Wellington 'The Just Man Justices': Gerard Manley Hopkins 'When the Laws Themselves Become Immoral': Bram Fischer 'A Coalescence between Law and Justice': Ismail Mahomed LANGUAGE 'It Most Froze Me to Hear such Talk': Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn When a Law Student Reads Huckleberry Finn: Elizabeth Perry Hodges When an Economist Drafts Legislation: John R. Commons 'The Legal-Economic Nexus': Warren J. Samuels LISTENING 'Am I Understanding You Well?': Harville Hendrix 'Listening Modes': Mark Weisberg and Jean Koh Peters METAPHOR 'The Whole of Thinking': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst 'The Negotiation of Meaning': George Lakoff and Mark Johnson 'The Economy of Intellect': D.N. McCloskey METHOD The Case Method of Law: Anthony Kronman 'A New Horizon': Bernard Lonergan's 'Transcendental Method' MOVEMENT 'Transcending Our Own Competitive Particularity': C.S. Lewis 'Stuck': Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn 'Constitutional Transformation' in South Africa: A. J. van der Walt PERFORMANCE 'The Performing Self': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst Authority and Communication: Charles Bingham PLAY 'Your Getting Lost': Robert Frost A 'True Question': Hans-Georg Gadamer QUESTIONING 'The Edge of an Abyss': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst 'The Socrates within Us': R. G. Collingwood READING 'Ear Training': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst 'Good Reading': J. Hillis Miller RHETORIC 'To Rediscover Rhetorical Elements': Kenneth Burke 'Probing for Common Ground': Wayne Booth's Rhetorology SILENCE Nelson Mandela's Speech from the Dock 'A Silent Professor': Mark Weisberg UNDERSTANDING 'The Contents of this Treaty': Waitangi 'Now I Know How to Go On': Ludwig Wittgenstein 'Fusion of Horizons': Hans-Georg Gadamer VOICE 'Officialese': Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem 'At Once Serious and Conversational': Lani Guinier's Demosprudence BIBLIOGRAPHY
Foreword by Gary Watt Acknowledgements Table of Cases PROLOGUE Attunement to Attunement To a General Reader When a Lawyer Writes a Complaint: Herbert A. Eastman INTRODUCTION Attunement to and from James Boyd White: Hearing the Hearing Connecting Readers An Alphabetical Lexicon A Guide for Confusion: Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst College Quotations: Political Listening Pronouns ACTIVITY 'Questions of a Certain Sort': Michael Oakeshott 'Now I Know How to Go On': Ludwig Wittgenstein ALIENATION The 'Alienation Effect': Bertolt Brecht 'The Art of Placing Action at a Distance': Milner S. Ball ATTENTION The Love Rule: Simone Weil 'A Certain Negro Woman': Prigg v. Pennsylvania Economizing on Attention: Arjo Klamer ATTUNEMENT 'When One Learns a Distant Language': A. L. Becker 'Learning as Attunement': Frances Trix CHARACTER 'Prejudices': Edmund Burke's Reflections on the French Revolution 'Integrity': Jane Austen's Persuasion 'Rational Fools' and Homo Economicus: Amartya Sen CONSTITUTION 'An Entailed Inheritance': Edmund Burke's Reflections on the French Revolution 'WE THE PEOPLE' and McCulloch v. Maryland Reimagining South Africa's 'Transformative Constitution' CONVERSATION 'A Game with Hard Rules': David Tracy 'The Power of Conversation': Jane Austen's Persuasion 'The Longer Conversation': The Waitangi Tribunal 'By Challenging Your View of Economics': Peter E. Earl CULTURE 'Talking Past Each Other': Joan Metge 'The Tribe of Economics': Arjo Klamer EQUALITY 'Economic Power': John R. Commons and Holden v Hardy Speaking Truth to Power: Nelson Mandela Socratic Questioning: Clark D. Cunningham EXPERIENCE 'Beyond Our Own Circle': Jane Austen's Persuasion 'Every Freshman a Phoenix': Amherst Composition and Literary Criticism 'Genuine Limit-Situations': David Tracy 'I Jettisoned Chicago Economics': Leonard Rapping IMAGINATION 'In One Person Many People': William Shakespeare's King Richard II 'Maps of Sovereignty': Perry Dane on the Cherokee Nation Images of Images: Kenneth Boulding's The Image INTEGRATION 'An Integral Reality': Lon Fuller's Jurisprudence Modern Constitutional Diversity: James Tully's Strange Multiplicity JUDGEMENT 'When We Think About New Cases': Linda Ross Meyer 'The Source of This Court's Authority': Planned Parenthood v. Casey JUSTICE 'The Sole Arbiter of Its Own Justice': Wi Parata v. Bishop of Wellington 'The Just Man Justices': Gerard Manley Hopkins 'When the Laws Themselves Become Immoral': Bram Fischer 'A Coalescence between Law and Justice': Ismail Mahomed LANGUAGE 'It Most Froze Me to Hear such Talk': Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn When a Law Student Reads Huckleberry Finn: Elizabeth Perry Hodges When an Economist Drafts Legislation: John R. Commons 'The Legal-Economic Nexus': Warren J. Samuels LISTENING 'Am I Understanding You Well?': Harville Hendrix 'Listening Modes': Mark Weisberg and Jean Koh Peters METAPHOR 'The Whole of Thinking': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst 'The Negotiation of Meaning': George Lakoff and Mark Johnson 'The Economy of Intellect': D.N. McCloskey METHOD The Case Method of Law: Anthony Kronman 'A New Horizon': Bernard Lonergan's 'Transcendental Method' MOVEMENT 'Transcending Our Own Competitive Particularity': C.S. Lewis 'Stuck': Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn 'Constitutional Transformation' in South Africa: A. J. van der Walt PERFORMANCE 'The Performing Self': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst Authority and Communication: Charles Bingham PLAY 'Your Getting Lost': Robert Frost A 'True Question': Hans-Georg Gadamer QUESTIONING 'The Edge of an Abyss': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst 'The Socrates within Us': R. G. Collingwood READING 'Ear Training': Composition and Literary Criticism at Amherst 'Good Reading': J. Hillis Miller RHETORIC 'To Rediscover Rhetorical Elements': Kenneth Burke 'Probing for Common Ground': Wayne Booth's Rhetorology SILENCE Nelson Mandela's Speech from the Dock 'A Silent Professor': Mark Weisberg UNDERSTANDING 'The Contents of this Treaty': Waitangi 'Now I Know How to Go On': Ludwig Wittgenstein 'Fusion of Horizons': Hans-Georg Gadamer VOICE 'Officialese': Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem 'At Once Serious and Conversational': Lani Guinier's Demosprudence BIBLIOGRAPHY
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