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Eintrag Nr. 20063
Literature type Articles
Author Mackenzie, Catriona
Title Relational Autonomy
Subtitle State of the Art Debate
Title of magazine / anthology Spinoza and Relational Autonomy : Being with Others
Editor (surname first) Armstrong, Aurelia ; Green, Keith ; Sangiacomo, Andrea (Hrsg./eds.)
Place published Edinburgh
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Year 2019
Pages [10]-31
Pages in total (of the volume) XI, 211
Language English
Thematic areas Anthropology / psychology / doctrine of affections / body and mind, Theory of society
Subject PPC/CM
Autopsy yes
Complete bibliographic evaluation yes
German commentary "Autonomy is a highly prized value in liberal democratic societies, a value associated with liberalism’s emphasis on the normative importance of the individual and of freedom. Reflecting this value, the concept of autonomy has come to play an increasingly central role in a wide range of debates in contemporary social and political philosophy and in bioethics.
Autonomy is both a status and a capacity concept. Understood as a status concept, it refers to the idea that individuals are entitled to exercise self-determining authority over their own lives, an entitlement that can only be infringed under specified constraints, such as if..." (Verlagsinformation)
English commentary "Autonomy is a highly prized value in liberal democratic societies, a value associated with liberalism’s emphasis on the normative importance of the individual and of freedom. Reflecting this value, the concept of autonomy has come to play an increasingly central role in a wide range of debates in contemporary social and political philosophy and in bioethics.
Autonomy is both a status and a capacity concept. Understood as a status concept, it refers to the idea that individuals are entitled to exercise self-determining authority over their own lives, an entitlement that can only be infringed under specified constraints, such as if..." (publishers information)
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