
Normative Subjects
Self and Collectivity in Morality and Law
Meir Dan-Cohen(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 28. March 2019
Book
Paperback/Softback
272 pages
978-0-19-093624-2 (ISBN)
Description
Normative Subjects alludes to the fields of morality and law, as well as to the entities, self and collectivity, addressed by these clusters of norms. The book explores connections between the two. The conception of self that informs this book is the joint product of two multifaceted philosophical strands, the constructivist and the hermeneutical. Various schools of thought view human beings as self creating: by pursuing our goals and promoting our projects, and so while abiding by the various norms that guide us in these endeavors, we also determine human identity. The result is an emphasis on a reciprocal relationship between law and morality on the one side and the composition and boundaries of the self on the other.
In what medium does this self creation take place, and who exactly is the "we" engaged in it? The answer suggested by the hermeneutical tradition provides the book with its second main theme. Like plays and novels, human beings are constituted by meaning, and these meanings vary in their level of abstraction. Self creation is a matter of fixing and elaborating these meanings at different levels of abstraction: the individual, the collective, and the universal. A key implication of this picture, explored in the book, is a conception of human dignity as accruing to us qua authors of the values and norms by which we define our selves individually and collectively.
In what medium does this self creation take place, and who exactly is the "we" engaged in it? The answer suggested by the hermeneutical tradition provides the book with its second main theme. Like plays and novels, human beings are constituted by meaning, and these meanings vary in their level of abstraction. Self creation is a matter of fixing and elaborating these meanings at different levels of abstraction: the individual, the collective, and the universal. A key implication of this picture, explored in the book, is a conception of human dignity as accruing to us qua authors of the values and norms by which we define our selves individually and collectively.
Reviews / Votes
Professor Dan-Cohen is one of the deepest and most interesting thinkers in the academy. Interweaving law, philosophy, and sociology, his work is always stimulating and constructively provocative. Dan-Cohen has a distinctive and highly independent point of view, engagement with which leads the reader to consider matters in a different way than the standard frames pursued within the literature. This fascinating collection will significantly enhance the field. * Seana Valentine Shiffrin, Professor of Philosophy and Pete Kameron Professor of Law and Social Justice, UCLA* Meir Dan-Cohen is one of the most interesting and exciting legal philosophers of our time. His work is a breath of fresh air in a field that can get too rarified and too caught up in its own intramural disputes. The essays collected in this volume are classic Dan-Cohen: smart, provocative, different, influential, and original. They reframe old debates in new light. * Ethan J. Leib, Professor of Law, Fordham Law School
* Meir Dan-Cohen's book is challenging and philosophically rich in all the best ways. Its more ethereal Kantian aspects are leavened by his lawyerly knowledge, and its sensible humanism is deepened by his capacity for trenchant philosophical analysis. One hopes that its essays will provide opportunities for careful critique and its book-like qualities will invite ambitious philosophical theory constructors in years to come. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
* Professor Dan-Cohen is one of the deepest and most interesting thinkers in the academy. Interweaving law, philosophy, and sociology, his work is always stimulating and constructively provocative. Dan-Cohen has a distinctive and highly independent point of view, engagement with which leads the reader to consider matters in a different way than the standard frames pursued within the literature. This fascinating collection will significantly enhance the field. * Seana Valentine Shiffrin, Professor of Philosophy and Pete Kameron Professor of Law and Social Justice, UCLA
* Meir Dan-Cohen is one of the most interesting and exciting legal philosophers of our time. His work is a breath of fresh air in a field that can get too rarified and too caught up in its own intramural disputes. The essays collected in this volume are classic Dan-Cohen: smart, provocative, different, influential, and original. They reframe old debates in new light. * Ethan J. Leib, Professor of Law, Fordham Law School
* Meir Dan-Cohen's book is challenging and philosophically rich in all the best ways. Its more ethereal Kantian aspects are leavened by his lawyerly knowledge, and its sensible humanism is deepened by his capacity for trenchant philosophical analysis. One hopes that its essays will provide opportunities for careful critique and its book-like qualities will invite ambitious philosophical theory constructors in years to come. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
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More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 16 mm
Weight
468 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-093624-2 (9780190936242)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
08/2016
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€19.99
Available for download

E-Book
08/2016
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€16.49
Available for download
Person
Meir Dan-Cohen is Milo Reese Robbins Chair in Legal Ethics, School of Law and Affiliated Professor, Department of Philosophy, at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of Rights, Persons, and Organizations (2nd Edition 2016), and Harmful Thoughts: Essays on Law, Self and Morality (2002).
Author
Milo Reese Robbins Chair in Legal EthicsMilo Reese Robbins Chair in Legal Ethics, University of California, Berkeley
Content
- Acknowledgments and Provenance
- Introduction
- Part I. Construction and Revision
- 1. Constructing Subjects
- 2. Socializing Harry
- 3. Revising Our Pasts
- 4. Regret, Luck, and Identity
- Part II. Value and Humanity
- 5. Individuals, Citizens, Persons
- 6. Dignity and Self-Creation
- 7. A Morality of Crime and Punishment
- Part III. Collective Subjects
- 8. Collective Personhoods
- 9. Sanctioning Corporations
- 10. Freedoms of Collective Speech
- Index