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Index
Cover
Title page
Copyright page
Preface
Notes
Part I: Hegelian Roots
1: From Desire to Recognition: Hegel's Grounding of Self-Consciousness
I
II
Notes
2: The Realm of Actualized Freedom: Hegel's Notion of a ‘Philosophy of Right’
I The context of the book
II The basic concept and structure of the text
III The impact of the work
Notes
Part II: Systematic Consequences
3: The Fabric of Justice: On the Limits of Contemporary Proceduralism
I
II
III
Notes
4: Labour and Recognition: A Redefinition
I
II
III
Notes
5: Recognition as Ideology: The Connection between Morality and Power
I
II
III
Notes
6: Dissolutions of the Social: The Social Theory of Luc Boltanski and Laurent Thévenot
I
II
III
Notes
7: Philosophy as Social Research: David Miller's Theory of Justice
I
II
III
Notes
Part III: Social and Theoretical Applications
8: Recognition between States: On the Moral Substrate of International Relations
I
II
Notes
9: Organized Self-Realization: Paradoxes of Individualization
I
II
III
IV
Notes
10: Paradoxes of Capitalist Modernization: A Research Programme
I Normative potentials of capitalist societies
II Moral progress in the social-democratic era
III The neoliberal revolution
IV On the concept of paradox
V Paradoxes of capitalist modernization
Notes
Part IV: Psychoanalytical Ramifications
11: The Work of Negativity: A Recognition-Theoretical Revision of Psychoanalysis
I
II
III
Notes
12: The I in We: Recognition as a Driving Force of Group Formation
I
II
III
Notes
13: Facets of the Presocial Self: Rejoinder to Joel Whitebook
I
II
III
Notes
14: Disempowering Reality: Secular Forms of Consolation
Notes
Index
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