Results 201 to 210 of about 63,699 (251)
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The Philosophical Review, 1963
IN EMILE Rousseau asserts that the sense of justice is no mere moral conception formed by the understanding alone, but a true sentiment of the heart enlightened by reason, the natural outcome of our primitive affections.' In the first part of this paper I set out a psychological construction to illustrate the way in which Rousseau's thesis might be ...
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IN EMILE Rousseau asserts that the sense of justice is no mere moral conception formed by the understanding alone, but a true sentiment of the heart enlightened by reason, the natural outcome of our primitive affections.' In the first part of this paper I set out a psychological construction to illustrate the way in which Rousseau's thesis might be ...
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Culture and the Sense of Justice
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 2005This article examines the intersection of culture and the sense of justice, summarizing a cumulative framework for analyzing human justice judgments that has emerged from several decades of social science research. It outlines a comprehensive guide to the terms and factors where culture may manifest itself and proposes a protocol for discerning the ...
Guillermina Jasso
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2019
This chapter explores the enduring relationship between lynching and capital punishment in North Carolina in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Lynching was an essential way North Carolinians communicated their racial animus to official state actors, who responded with legal lynchings—the unfair trials of African American defendants before all-white juries ...
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This chapter explores the enduring relationship between lynching and capital punishment in North Carolina in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Lynching was an essential way North Carolinians communicated their racial animus to official state actors, who responded with legal lynchings—the unfair trials of African American defendants before all-white juries ...
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Stability and the sense of justice
Philosophy & Social Criticism, 2018In A Theory of Justice, John Rawls’s first argument for the inherent stability of a well-ordered society seeks to establish that citizens of such a society would come to share the same or similar senses of justice. In his late work, Rawls significantly revised his second argument for stability, but he repeatedly pronounced himself satisfied with the ...
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EPPO and a common sense of justice
Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, 2021Thomas Elholm
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The public sense of justice in Scandinavia: A study of attitudes towards punishments
European Journal of Criminology, 2015Helgi Gunnlaugsson, Henrik Tham
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