This week, I have been celebrating my appointment as a "Presidential Research Professor" at Northern Illinois University, which will begin in July.
One of the benefits of this position is that it will allow me to take a year off from teaching in 2009-2010 to work on a new book. My thinking about this book project has been changing. But as of now, what I have in mind is a book that might be entitled Natural Right and Biology: A Darwinian History of Political Philosophy.
In Darwinian Natural Right and Darwinian Conservatism, I have defended the idea that an Aristotelian conception of natural right might be reformulated as rooted in a Darwinian understanding of human nature and human history. In this new book, I foresee elaborating this idea through a Darwinian account of natural right moving through the history of political philosophy.
My tentative sketch of chapters for this book looks like this:
1. DARWINIAN HUMAN NATURE
2. ANCIENT NATURAL RIGHT: ARISTOTLE
3. MEDIEVAL NATURAL LAW: AQUINAS
4. MODERN NATURAL RIGHTS: HOBBES, LOCKE, AND ROUSSEAU
5. THE NATURAL HISTORY OF HUMANITY: HUME, SMITH, AND WESTERMARCK
6. LIBERTY AND JUSTICE: HAYEK, RAWLS, AND NUSSBAUM
Yes, I know, it's ridiculously ambitious. But I'm going to give it a try.
I'll pre-order.d
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What about Hans Jonas's philosophical biology and imperative of responsibility?
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