第 1/1 張圖片
Justice: Rights and Wrongs by Nicholas Wolterstorff (English) Paperback Book
狀況:
庫存 3 件
運費:
所在地:Fairfield, Ohio, 美國
送達日期:
估計於 6月11日, 二至 6月22日, 六之間送達 運送地點 43230
退貨:
保障:
請參閱物品說明或聯絡賣家以取得詳細資料。閱覽全部詳情查看保障詳情
(不符合「eBay 買家保障方案」資格)
安心購物
物品細節
- 物品狀況
- 全新: 全新,未閱讀過和使用過的書籍,狀況完好,不存在缺頁或內頁受損。 查看所有物品狀況定義會在新視窗或分頁中開啟
- ISBN-13
- 9780691146300
- Book Title
- Justice
- ISBN
- 9780691146300
- Publication Year
- 2010
- Type
- Textbook
- Format
- Trade Paperback
- Language
- English
- Publication Name
- Justice : Rights and Wrongs
- Item Height
- 1in
- Item Length
- 9.1in
- Publisher
- Princeton University Press
- Item Width
- 7.1in
- Item Weight
- 20 Oz
- Number of Pages
- 416 Pages
關於產品
Product Information
Wide-ranging and ambitious, Justice combines moral philosophy and Christian ethics to develop an important theory of rights and of justice as grounded in rights. Nicholas Wolterstorff discusses what it is to have a right, and he locates rights in the respect due the worth of the rights-holder. After contending that socially-conferred rights require the existence of natural rights, he argues that no secular account of natural human rights is successful; he offers instead a theistic account. Wolterstorff prefaces his systematic account of justice as grounded in rights with an exploration of the common claim that rights-talk is inherently individualistic and possessive. He demonstrates that the idea of natural rights originated neither in the Enlightenment nor in the individualistic philosophy of the late Middle Ages, but was already employed by the canon lawyers of the twelfth century. He traces our intuitions about rights and justice back even further, to Hebrew and Christian scriptures. After extensively discussing justice in the Old Testament and the New, he goes on to show why ancient Greek and Roman philosophy could not serve as a framework for a theory of rights. Connecting rights and wrongs to God's relationship with humankind, Justice not only offers a rich and compelling philosophical account of justice, but also makes an important contribution to overcoming the present-day divide between religious discourse and human rights.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Princeton University Press
ISBN-10
0691146306
ISBN-13
9780691146300
eBay Product ID (ePID)
79797204
Product Key Features
Publication Name
Justice : Rights and Wrongs
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Publication Year
2010
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
416 Pages
Dimensions
Item Length
9.1in
Item Height
1in
Item Width
7.1in
Item Weight
20 Oz
Additional Product Features
Lc Classification Number
Br115.J8w65 2010
Reviews
Justice: Rights and Wrongs is magisterial in scope, incisive and inventive in its argument. Wolterstorff stakes out a novel position in contemporary debates with an undeniable analytical rigor. . . . Wolterstorff's philosophical arguments . . . stand on their own two feet and genuinely break new ground in the field. Indeed, this text merits and should attract a very wide readership. ---Stephen Lake, Philosophy in Review, "The work of a first-rate philosopher at the top of his game, this book sets forth a distinctive and challenging theory of justice formulated in explicitly scriptural and Christian terms, yet in conversation with the leading alternatives in the Anglophone world. Not only does this book reflect the clarity and acuity of thought that characterize Wolterstorff's work, it also reflects the humane sensibilities of someone who has thought and felt deeply about these matters for a long time." --Jean Porter, University of Notre Dame, Justiceis a seminal contribution to Christian ethics and useful riposte to those modern Gibbons to sneer at the idea that Christians have anything useful to say about the things that matter., For all of us who aspire to, or even just admire, the perhaps not so outrageous vocation of Christian scholarship, Nicholas Wolterstorff,Justiceis an inspiration., Nicholas Wolterstorff's Justice: Rights and Wrongs is a magisterial book. In it . . . Wolterstorff has gotten justice right. This, in case the thrust of my terse comment wasn't plain enough, is a very high praise. -- Miroslav Volf, Books & Culture, Nicholas Wolterstorff'sJustice: Rights and Wrongsis a magisterial book. In it . . . Wolterstorff has gotten justice right. This, in case the thrust of my terse comment wasn't plain enough, is a very high praise., "Wolterstorff's Justice is the most impressive book on justice since Rawls' A Theory of Justice . In a fresh and vigorous manner, Wolterstorff defends a conception of justice as inherent rights and argues for its superiority to a conception of justice as right order. The sweep of the book is breathtaking, ranging from a detailed discussion of justice in the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament to medieval, early modern, and contemporary theories of justice. Wolterstorff's most provocative thesis is that all existing secular as well as most religious attempts to ground a theory of justice fail. Even those who are skeptical about his theistic grounding of justice will be challenged by the clarity, rigor, and thoroughness of his arguments." 'e"Richard J. Bernstein, New School for Social Research, "Wolterstorff draws on a wide range of philosophical/theological/ethical material. He does a magnificent job of developing a sustained argument for the thesis that the only solid foundation for grounding human rights is biblical theism." --F. G. Kirkpatrick, Choice, "Wolterstorff's Justice is the most impressive book on justice since Rawls' A Theory of Justice . In a fresh and vigorous manner, Wolterstorff defends a conception of justice as inherent rights and argues for its superiority to a conception of justice as right order. The sweep of the book is breathtaking, ranging from a detailed discussion of justice in the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament to medieval, early modern, and contemporary theories of justice. Wolterstorff's most provocative thesis is that all existing secular as well as most religious attempts to ground a theory of justice fail. Even those who are skeptical about his theistic grounding of justice will be challenged by the clarity, rigor, and thoroughness of his arguments." --Richard J. Bernstein, New School for Social Research, Wolterstorff has made . . . a tremendous contribution . . . to our philosophical acuity and theological discernment on these matters. . . . [R]ender him his due for an erudite and sophisticated account of why rights are not wrong., For all of us who aspire to, or even just admire, the perhaps not so outrageous vocation of Christian scholarship, Nicholas Wolterstorff, Justice is an inspiration. -- Richard W. Garnett, First Things, Justice: Rights and Wrongsis magisterial in scope, incisive and inventive in its argument. Wolterstorff stakes out a novel position in contemporary debates with an undeniable analytical rigor. . . . Wolterstorff's philosophical arguments . . . stand on their own two feet and genuinely break new ground in the field. Indeed, this text merits and should attract a very wide readership. -- Stephen Lake, Philosophy in Review, Nicholas Wolterstorff's Justice: Rights and Wrongs is a magisterial book. In it . . . Wolterstorff has gotten justice right. This, in case the thrust of my terse comment wasn't plain enough, is a very high praise. ---Miroslav Volf, Books & Culture, In Justice: Rights and Wrongs , Nicholas Wolterstorff reaches far back into biblical tradition and Greek philosophy to trace a distinctive vision of justice based on the worth that God confers on each person. For Wolterstorff, respect for human worth entails respect for human rights; this marks an important turn away from the tendency in recent theology to dismiss talk about rights as an Enlightenment innovation that is alien to Christian ethics. -- Robin Lovin, Christian Century, Justice is a seminal contribution to Christian ethics and useful riposte to those modern Gibbons to sneer at the idea that Christians have anything useful to say about the things that matter. ---Nick Spencer, Third Way Magazine, " Justice is a seminal contribution to Christian ethics and useful riposte to those modern Gibbons to sneer at the idea that Christians have anything useful to say about the things that matter."-- Nick Spencer, Third Way Magazine, Wolterstorff draws on a wide range of philosophical/theological/ethical material. He does a magnificent job of developing a sustained argument for the thesis that the only solid foundation for grounding human rights is biblical theism. -- F. G. Kirkpatrick, Choice, For all of us who aspire to, or even just admire, the perhaps not so outrageous vocation of Christian scholarship, Nicholas Wolterstorff,Justiceis an inspiration. -- Richard W. Garnett, First Things, For all of us who aspire to, or even just admire, the perhaps not so outrageous vocation of Christian scholarship, Nicholas Wolterstorff, Justice is an inspiration., Wolterstorff draws on a wide range of philosophical/theological/ethical material. He does a magnificent job of developing a sustained argument for the thesis that the only solid foundation for grounding human rights is biblical theism. ---F. G. Kirkpatrick, Choice, Wolterstorff has made . . . a tremendous contribution . . . to our philosophical acuity and theological discernment on these matters. . . . [R]ender him his due for an erudite and sophisticated account of why rights are not wrong. ---John D. Carlson, Journal of Politics and Religion, "Wolterstorff has made . . . a tremendous contribution . . . to our philosophical acuity and theological discernment on these matters. . . . [R]ender him his due for an erudite and sophisticated account of why rights are not wrong." --John D. Carlson, Journal of Politics and Religion, Nicholas Wolterstorff'sJustice: Rights and Wrongsis a magisterial book. In it . . . Wolterstorff has gotten justice right. This, in case the thrust of my terse comment wasn't plain enough, is a very high praise. -- Miroslav Volf, Books & Culture, "Nicholas Wolterstorff's Justice: Rights and Wrongs is a magisterial book. In it . . . Wolterstorff has gotten justice right. This, in case the thrust of my terse comment wasn't plain enough, is a very high praise."-- Miroslav Volf, Books & Culture, "For all of us who aspire to, or even just admire, the perhaps not so outrageous vocation of Christian scholarship, Nicholas Wolterstorff, Justice is an inspiration." --Richard W. Garnett, First Things, [T]his book is a formidable achievement, intellectually rigorous yet emotionally engaged, and combining meticulous conceptual analysis with a rich historical grasp of the roots of our moral culture. Its arguments offer a serious challenge to the complacency of contemporary secularism, implying as they do that our culture of rights could only have come into existence supported by a metaphysical framework that exhibits each human being, whatever their flaws and defects, as loved redemptively by God. -- John Cottingham, Times Literary Supplement, " Justice: Rights and Wrongs is magisterial in scope, incisive and inventive in its argument. Wolterstorff stakes out a novel position in contemporary debates with an undeniable analytical rigor. . . . Wolterstorff's philosophical arguments . . . stand on their own two feet and genuinely break new ground in the field. Indeed, this text merits and should attract a very wide readership." --Stephen Lake, Philosophy in Review, "In Justice: Rights and Wrongs , Nicholas Wolterstorff reaches far back into biblical tradition and Greek philosophy to trace a distinctive vision of justice based on the worth that God confers on each person. For Wolterstorff, respect for human worth entails respect for human rights; this marks an important turn away from the tendency in recent theology to dismiss talk about rights as an Enlightenment innovation that is alien to Christian ethics."-- Robin Lovin, Christian Century, Justice: Rights and Wrongs is magisterial in scope, incisive and inventive in its argument. Wolterstorff stakes out a novel position in contemporary debates with an undeniable analytical rigor. . . . Wolterstorff's philosophical arguments . . . stand on their own two feet and genuinely break new ground in the field. Indeed, this text merits and should attract a very wide readership., Justice is a seminal contribution to Christian ethics and useful riposte to those modern Gibbons to sneer at the idea that Christians have anything useful to say about the things that matter. -- Nick Spencer, Third Way Magazine, Wolterstorff draws on a wide range of philosophical/theological/ethical material. He does a magnificent job of developing a sustained argument for the thesis that the only solid foundation for grounding human rights is biblical theism., In Justice: Rights and Wrongs , Nicholas Wolterstorff reaches far back into biblical tradition and Greek philosophy to trace a distinctive vision of justice based on the worth that God confers on each person. For Wolterstorff, respect for human worth entails respect for human rights; this marks an important turn away from the tendency in recent theology to dismiss talk about rights as an Enlightenment innovation that is alien to Christian ethics., Wolterstorff has made . . . a tremendous contribution . . . to our philosophical acuity and theological discernment on these matters. . . . [R]ender him his due for an erudite and sophisticated account of why rights are not wrong. -- John D. Carlson, Journal of Politics and Religion, "[T]his book is a formidable achievement, intellectually rigorous yet emotionally engaged, and combining meticulous conceptual analysis with a rich historical grasp of the roots of our moral culture. Its arguments offer a serious challenge to the complacency of contemporary secularism, implying as they do that our culture of rights could only have come into existence supported by a metaphysical framework that exhibits each human being, whatever their flaws and defects, as loved redemptively by God." --John Cottingham, Times Literary Supplement, [T]his book is a formidable achievement, intellectually rigorous yet emotionally engaged, and combining meticulous conceptual analysis with a rich historical grasp of the roots of our moral culture. Its arguments offer a serious challenge to the complacency of contemporary secularism, implying as they do that our culture of rights could only have come into existence supported by a metaphysical framework that exhibits each human being, whatever their flaws and defects, as loved redemptively by God. ---John Cottingham, Times Literary Supplement, InJustice: Rights and Wrongs, Nicholas Wolterstorff reaches far back into biblical tradition and Greek philosophy to trace a distinctive vision of justice based on the worth that God confers on each person. For Wolterstorff, respect for human worth entails respect for human rights; this marks an important turn away from the tendency in recent theology to dismiss talk about rights as an Enlightenment innovation that is alien to Christian ethics., "Wolterstorff has made . . . a tremendous contribution . . . to our philosophical acuity and theological discernment on these matters. . . . [R]ender him his due for an erudite and sophisticated account of why rights are not wrong."-- John D. Carlson, Journal of Politics and Religion, For all of us who aspire to, or even just admire, the perhaps not so outrageous vocation of Christian scholarship, Nicholas Wolterstorff, Justice is an inspiration. ---Richard W. Garnett, First Things, "Nicholas Wolterstorff's Justice: Rights and Wrongs is a magisterial book. In it . . . Wolterstorff has gotten justice right. This, in case the thrust of my terse comment wasn't plain enough, is a very high praise." --Miroslav Volf, Books & Culture, InJustice: Rights and Wrongs, Nicholas Wolterstorff reaches far back into biblical tradition and Greek philosophy to trace a distinctive vision of justice based on the worth that God confers on each person. For Wolterstorff, respect for human worth entails respect for human rights; this marks an important turn away from the tendency in recent theology to dismiss talk about rights as an Enlightenment innovation that is alien to Christian ethics. -- Robin Lovin, Christian Century, "In Justice: Rights and Wrongs , Nicholas Wolterstorff reaches far back into biblical tradition and Greek philosophy to trace a distinctive vision of justice based on the worth that God confers on each person. For Wolterstorff, respect for human worth entails respect for human rights; this marks an important turn away from the tendency in recent theology to dismiss talk about rights as an Enlightenment innovation that is alien to Christian ethics." --Robin Lovin, Christian Century, Justice is a seminal contribution to Christian ethics and useful riposte to those modern Gibbons to sneer at the idea that Christians have anything useful to say about the things that matter., "For all of us who aspire to, or even just admire, the perhaps not so outrageous vocation of Christian scholarship, Nicholas Wolterstorff, Justice is an inspiration."-- Richard W. Garnett, First Things, "Wolterstorff draws on a wide range of philosophical/theological/ethical material. He does a magnificent job of developing a sustained argument for the thesis that the only solid foundation for grounding human rights is biblical theism."-- F. G. Kirkpatrick, Choice, Justiceis a seminal contribution to Christian ethics and useful riposte to those modern Gibbons to sneer at the idea that Christians have anything useful to say about the things that matter. -- Nick Spencer, Third Way Magazine, "The work of a first-rate philosopher at the top of his game, this book sets forth a distinctive and challenging theory of justice formulated in explicitly scriptural and Christian terms, yet in conversation with the leading alternatives in the Anglophone world. Not only does this book reflect the clarity and acuity of thought that characterize Wolterstorff's work, it also reflects the humane sensibilities of someone who has thought and felt deeply about these matters for a long time." 'e"Jean Porter, University of Notre Dame, In Justice: Rights and Wrongs , Nicholas Wolterstorff reaches far back into biblical tradition and Greek philosophy to trace a distinctive vision of justice based on the worth that God confers on each person. For Wolterstorff, respect for human worth entails respect for human rights; this marks an important turn away from the tendency in recent theology to dismiss talk about rights as an Enlightenment innovation that is alien to Christian ethics. ---Robin Lovin, Christian Century, [T]his book is a formidable achievement, intellectually rigorous yet emotionally engaged, and combining meticulous conceptual analysis with a rich historical grasp of the roots of our moral culture. Its arguments offer a serious challenge to the complacency of contemporary secularism, implying as they do that our culture of rights could only have come into existence supported by a metaphysical framework that exhibits each human being, whatever their flaws and defects, as loved redemptively by God., "[T]his book is a formidable achievement, intellectually rigorous yet emotionally engaged, and combining meticulous conceptual analysis with a rich historical grasp of the roots of our moral culture. Its arguments offer a serious challenge to the complacency of contemporary secularism, implying as they do that our culture of rights could only have come into existence supported by a metaphysical framework that exhibits each human being, whatever their flaws and defects, as loved redemptively by God."-- John Cottingham, Times Literary Supplement, " Justice is a seminal contribution to Christian ethics and useful riposte to those modern Gibbons to sneer at the idea that Christians have anything useful to say about the things that matter." --Nick Spencer, Third Way Magazine, " Justice: Rights and Wrongs is magisterial in scope, incisive and inventive in its argument. Wolterstorff stakes out a novel position in contemporary debates with an undeniable analytical rigor. . . . Wolterstorff's philosophical arguments . . . stand on their own two feet and genuinely break new ground in the field. Indeed, this text merits and should attract a very wide readership."-- Stephen Lake, Philosophy in Review, Justice: Rights and Wrongs is magisterial in scope, incisive and inventive in its argument. Wolterstorff stakes out a novel position in contemporary debates with an undeniable analytical rigor. . . . Wolterstorff's philosophical arguments . . . stand on their own two feet and genuinely break new ground in the field. Indeed, this text merits and should attract a very wide readership. -- Stephen Lake, Philosophy in Review, Nicholas Wolterstorff's Justice: Rights and Wrongs is a magisterial book. In it . . . Wolterstorff has gotten justice right. This, in case the thrust of my terse comment wasn't plain enough, is a very high praise.
Copyright Date
2008
Topic
Ethics & Moral Philosophy, General, Christianity / General, Christian Theology / Ethics
Lccn
2007-019574
Dewey Decimal
241/.622
Intended Audience
College Audience
Dewey Edition
22
Genre
Religion, Philosophy
賣家提供的物品說明
運費與處理費
物品所在地:
Fairfield, Ohio, 美國
運送地點
不丹, 中國, 中國台灣, 中國澳門, 中國香港, 中非共和國, 丹麥, 乍德, 也門, 亞塞拜疆共和國, 亞美尼亞, 以色列, 伊拉克, 伯利茲, 佛得角群島, 保加利亞, 克羅地亞共和國, 全球, 冰島, 列支敦士登, 利比利亞, 剛果共和國, 剛果民主共和國, 加拿大, 加納, 加蓬共和國, 匈牙利, 南非, 南韓, 博茨瓦納, 卡塔爾, 印尼, 印度, 危地馬拉, 厄瓜多爾, 厄立特里亞, 吉布提, 吉爾吉斯, 哈薩克, 哥倫比亞, 哥斯達黎加, 喀麥隆, 圖瓦盧, 土庫斯安德凱科斯群島, 土庫曼, 土耳其, 圭亞那, 坦桑尼亞, 埃及, 埃塞俄比亞, 基里巴斯, 塔吉克, 塞內加爾, 塞拉利昂, 塞浦路斯, 塞爾維亞, 塞舌爾, 墨西哥, 多哥, 多明尼加, 多明尼加共和國, 奧地利, 孟加拉, 安哥拉, 安圭拉島, 安提瓜和巴布達, 安道爾, 寮國, 尼加拉瓜, 尼日利亞, 尼日爾, 尼泊爾, 巴哈馬, 巴基斯坦, 巴拉圭, 巴林, 巴西, 布基納法索, 布隆迪, 希臘, 幾內亞, 幾內亞比索, 庫克群島, 德國, 意大利, 愛沙尼亞, 愛爾蘭, 所羅門群島, 拉脫維亞, 挪威, 捷克共和國, 摩洛哥, 摩爾多瓦, 摩納哥, 斐濟, 斯威士蘭, 斯洛伐克, 斯洛文尼亞, 斯瓦爾巴群島和揚馬延島, 斯里蘭卡, 新加坡, 日本, 智利, 柬埔寨, 格恩西島, 格陵蘭, 格雷納達, 格魯吉亞, 梵蒂岡, 比利時, 毛里求斯, 汶萊, 沙特阿拉伯, 法國, 波斯尼亞和黑塞哥維那, 波蘭, 泰國, 津巴布韋, 洪都拉斯, 海地, 湯加, 澤西島, 澳洲, 烏干達, 烏拉圭, 烏茲別克, 牙買加, 特里尼達和多巴哥, 玻利維亞, 瑙魯, 瑞典, 瑞士, 瓦利斯和富圖納群島, 瓦努阿圖, 甘比亞, 百慕達群島, 盧旺達, 盧森堡, 直布羅陀, 福克蘭群島(馬爾維納斯), 科威特, 科特迪瓦(象牙海岸), 秘魯, 突尼斯, 立陶宛, 約旦, 納米比亞, 紐埃, 紐西蘭, 索馬里, 羅馬尼亞, 聖基茨-尼維斯, 聖文森和格瑞那丁, 聖皮耶與密克隆群島, 聖盧西亞, 聖赫倫那島, 聖馬力諾, 肯亞, 芬蘭, 英國, 英屬維爾京群島, 茅利塔尼亞, 荷屬安地列斯群島, 荷蘭, 莫桑比克, 菲律賓, 萊索托, 葛摩, 葡萄牙, 蒙古, 蒙特色拉特島, 薩爾瓦多, 蘇里南, 西撒哈拉, 西班牙, 貝寧, 贊比亞, 赤道幾內亞, 越南, 開曼群島, 阿富汗, 阿拉伯聯合酋長國, 阿曼, 阿根廷, 阿爾及利亞, 阿爾巴尼亞, 阿魯巴, 馬來西亞, 馬其頓, 馬拉維, 馬爾代夫, 馬約特島, 馬耳他, 馬達加斯加, 馬里, 黎巴嫩, 黑山
排除:
APO/FPO, 俄羅斯聯邦, 利比亞, 委內瑞拉, 巴布亞新畿內亞, 巴拿馬, 巴貝多, 新喀里多尼亞, 法屬圭亞那, 法屬玻里尼西亞, 烏克蘭, 瓜德羅普島, 留尼汪島, 白俄羅斯, 美國領地, 西薩摩亞, 阿拉斯加/夏威夷, 馬提尼克島
運費與處理費 | 每加一件物品 | 運送地點 | 運送方式 | 運送*查看送達備註 |
---|---|---|---|---|
免運費 | 免費 | 美國 | Economy Shipping | 估計於 6月11日, 二至 6月22日, 六之間送達 運送地點 43230 |
處理時間 |
---|
通常會在收到所有款項後的 10 個工作日內發貨。 |
稅項 |
---|
結賬時相關稅項可能適用。 進一步了解進一步了解為 eBay 購物繳稅。 |
物品編號 395047791053 的銷售稅
物品編號 395047791053 的銷售稅
賣家會對寄往以下各州的物品收取銷售稅:
州/省 | 銷售稅稅率 |
---|
退貨政策
收到物品後聯絡賣家的期限: | 退款方式 |
---|---|
30 日 | 退款 |
買家負責支付退貨運費。
賣家信用評價 (1,023,774)
u***s- 買家留下的信用評價。
過去 1 個月
購買已獲認證
😍 Fantastic⚡️Fast Shipping🌸Gr8 Packing TY! Five Star ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍👍 😍
a***n (1798)- 買家留下的信用評價。
過去 1 個月
購買已獲認證
Perfect shipping! I'm impressed with how quickly you completed all of your tasks. You did them quickly, and you also paid attention and avoided potential mistakes, showing that you're capable of excellent work on future projects so we can continue to purchase from you in the future in the many more days to come.
n***m (98)- 買家留下的信用評價。
過去 1 個月
購買已獲認證
Everything is in order, book came on time, I love it. Thank you