Table of Contents
Part I. Lecture.- Chapter 1. Freedom and Other Robustly Demanding Goods (Philip Pettit).- Part II. Colloquium.- Chapter 2. Rule-Following And A Priori-Biconditionals – A Sea Of Tears? (Amrei Bahr, Markus Seidel).- Chapter 3. Pettit’s Mixed Causal Descriptivism: Feeling Blue (Amrei Bahr, Bianca Hüsing, Jan G. Michel).- Chapter 4. Discovering the Properties of ‘Qualia’ in Pettit's Theory of Phenomenal Consciousness (Jonas Dessouky, Tobias Peters).- Chapter 5. Playing Pong with the Mind? Pettit’s Program Model and Mental Causation (Kim Joris Boström, Gordon Leonhard, Lisa Steinmetz).- Chapter 6. Notes on Pettit’s Concept of Orthonomy (Julia Belz, Alexa Nossek).- Chapter 7. Two Problems of Value-Monistic Consequentialism in Philip Pettit’s Theory of Criminal Justice (Tim Grafe, Tobias Hachmann, Michael Sabuga).- Chapter 8. Indirect Consequentialism and Moral Psychology (Anna M. Blundell, Simon Derpmann, Konstantin Schnieder, Ricarda Spieker).- Chapter 9. What is the Foundation of Pettit’s Non-Redundant Realism about Group Agents? (Dominik Düber, Nadine Mooren, Tim Rojek).- Chapter 10. Pluralism Across Domains (David P. Schweikard).- Chapter 11. Which Liberalism, which Republicanism? Constructing Traditions of Political Thought with Pettit (Sven Lüders, Johannes Müller).- Chapter 12. Focussing on the Eyeball Test: A Problematic Testing Device in Philip Pettit’s The ory of Justice (Frieder Bögner, Jörn Elgert, Carolyn Iselt).- Part III. Reply Essay.- Chapter 13. Self-Defense on Five Fronts: A Reply to my Commentators (Philip Pettit).