Jethro Butler | University of Warwick (original) (raw)

Papers by Jethro Butler

Research paper thumbnail of Does Libertarianism Provide a Justification for Vaccine Hesitancy?

The Political Quarterly

Libertarian ideas of self‐ownership and the priority of bodily autonomy have featured prominently... more Libertarian ideas of self‐ownership and the priority of bodily autonomy have featured prominently in the political debate over vaccination programmes and the justifiability or otherwise of restricting the liberty of the unvaccinated. In this article we look at a selection of recent right‐libertarian literature to show that there is a considerable divergence between the application of consistent libertarian principles to this issue by academic libertarians and the strident opposition to vaccination programmes and vaccine mandates expressed by people who profess to be libertarians in the public‐political debate.

Research paper thumbnail of The Politics of Covid Vaccine Hesitancy and Opposition

The Political Quarterly

Opposition to vaccines is not a new phenomenon, but positions once associated with traditional re... more Opposition to vaccines is not a new phenomenon, but positions once associated with traditional religious or conservative stances have given way to some highly disparate views that transcend traditional left/right/religious divisions. This article reviews recent literature showing how social media has contributed to the spread of conspiracy theories around Covid‐19 and mass vaccination programmes. The narratives discussed are principally those of the right and the religious right.

Research paper thumbnail of Pluralism and Liberal Politics

1. Introduction: Pluralism and Political Theory 2. Two Metaphysical Pluralists: Berlin and James ... more 1. Introduction: Pluralism and Political Theory 2. Two Metaphysical Pluralists: Berlin and James 3. Classical Pragmatism and Pluralism 4. From Pluralism to Politics: Four Neo-Berlinian Proposals 5. Value Pluralism as an Account of Value 6. Towards a New Pragmatist Political Theory 7. Can (Political) Liberals Take Their Own Side in an Argument? 8. Religion and Politics

Research paper thumbnail of Reviewers for the journal of Global Ethics

Journal of Global Ethics, 2006

Skip to content. Taylor & Francis Online: Librarians; Authors & Editors; Societie... more Skip to content. Taylor & Francis Online: Librarians; Authors & Editors; Societies. Register; Sign in; Mobile. Home; Browse; Products; Redeem a voucher; Shortlist; Shopping Cart Cart. The online platform for Taylor & Francis Group content. Search. Advanced Search Within current journal Entire site. Home > List of Issues > Table of Contents > Reviewers for the Journal of Global Ethics. Browse journal. View all volumes and issues. Current issue. Most read articles. Most cited articles. Authors and submissions. Call for papers. Instructions for authors. Submit ...

Research paper thumbnail of Finding Space for the Truth: Joshua Cohen on Truth and Public Reason

Res Publica, 2016

One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political liberalism is that truth h... more One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political liberalism is that truth has no place in public political deliberation on matters of basic justice. Joshua Cohen thinks there is a tension between Rawls's exclusion of truth in public political deliberation and the importance accorded to truth in the conception of morally serious political deliberation held by most citizens. Cohen claims that this apparent tension can be resolved by constructing and introducing a suitably political, non-divisive and neutral, conception of truth which is capable of satisfying both the highly distinctive requirements of Rawlsian political liberalism and the importance accorded to truth by the conception of public deliberation held by most citizens. In this paper I argue that Cohen is unsuccessful in this attempt and that his political conception of truth cannot satisfy both political liberalism and a descriptively adequate specification of the importance accorded to truth by the familiar accounts of morally serious political deliberation upon which Cohen relies.

Research paper thumbnail of Finding Space for the Truth: Joshua Cohen on Truth and Public Reason

One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political liberalism is that truth h... more One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political
liberalism is that truth has no place in public political deliberation on matters of basic justice. Joshua Cohen thinks there is a tension between Rawls’s exclusion of truth in public political deliberation and the importance accorded to truth in the conception of morally serious political deliberation held by most citizens. Cohen claims that this apparent tension can be resolved by constructing and introducing a suitably political, non-divisive and neutral, conception of truth which is capable of satisfying both the highly distinctive requirements of Rawlsian political liberalism and the importance accorded to truth by the conception of public deliberation held by most citizens. In this paper I argue that Cohen is unsuccessful in this attempt and that his political conception of truth cannot satisfy both political liberalism and a descriptively adequate specification of the importance accorded to truth by the familiar accounts of morally serious political deliberation upon which Cohen relies.

Research paper thumbnail of Pluralism and Liberal Politics

There exists a common view that there is a sound and natural link between pluralism and liberalis... more There exists a common view that there is a sound and natural link between pluralism and liberalism. Indeed, though it may be the case that strong pluralists like Berlin and politically liberal pluralists like Rawls part company when it comes to talking about the nature and content of pluralism, most people think that they have in common the view that liberal commitments follow fairly naturally from pluralistic ones.

Research paper thumbnail of Natural Law Liberalism - By Christopher Wolfe

Philosophical Books, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Does Libertarianism Provide a Justification for Vaccine Hesitancy?

The Political Quarterly

Libertarian ideas of self‐ownership and the priority of bodily autonomy have featured prominently... more Libertarian ideas of self‐ownership and the priority of bodily autonomy have featured prominently in the political debate over vaccination programmes and the justifiability or otherwise of restricting the liberty of the unvaccinated. In this article we look at a selection of recent right‐libertarian literature to show that there is a considerable divergence between the application of consistent libertarian principles to this issue by academic libertarians and the strident opposition to vaccination programmes and vaccine mandates expressed by people who profess to be libertarians in the public‐political debate.

Research paper thumbnail of The Politics of Covid Vaccine Hesitancy and Opposition

The Political Quarterly

Opposition to vaccines is not a new phenomenon, but positions once associated with traditional re... more Opposition to vaccines is not a new phenomenon, but positions once associated with traditional religious or conservative stances have given way to some highly disparate views that transcend traditional left/right/religious divisions. This article reviews recent literature showing how social media has contributed to the spread of conspiracy theories around Covid‐19 and mass vaccination programmes. The narratives discussed are principally those of the right and the religious right.

Research paper thumbnail of Pluralism and Liberal Politics

1. Introduction: Pluralism and Political Theory 2. Two Metaphysical Pluralists: Berlin and James ... more 1. Introduction: Pluralism and Political Theory 2. Two Metaphysical Pluralists: Berlin and James 3. Classical Pragmatism and Pluralism 4. From Pluralism to Politics: Four Neo-Berlinian Proposals 5. Value Pluralism as an Account of Value 6. Towards a New Pragmatist Political Theory 7. Can (Political) Liberals Take Their Own Side in an Argument? 8. Religion and Politics

Research paper thumbnail of Reviewers for the journal of Global Ethics

Journal of Global Ethics, 2006

Skip to content. Taylor & Francis Online: Librarians; Authors & Editors; Societie... more Skip to content. Taylor & Francis Online: Librarians; Authors & Editors; Societies. Register; Sign in; Mobile. Home; Browse; Products; Redeem a voucher; Shortlist; Shopping Cart Cart. The online platform for Taylor & Francis Group content. Search. Advanced Search Within current journal Entire site. Home > List of Issues > Table of Contents > Reviewers for the Journal of Global Ethics. Browse journal. View all volumes and issues. Current issue. Most read articles. Most cited articles. Authors and submissions. Call for papers. Instructions for authors. Submit ...

Research paper thumbnail of Finding Space for the Truth: Joshua Cohen on Truth and Public Reason

Res Publica, 2016

One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political liberalism is that truth h... more One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political liberalism is that truth has no place in public political deliberation on matters of basic justice. Joshua Cohen thinks there is a tension between Rawls's exclusion of truth in public political deliberation and the importance accorded to truth in the conception of morally serious political deliberation held by most citizens. Cohen claims that this apparent tension can be resolved by constructing and introducing a suitably political, non-divisive and neutral, conception of truth which is capable of satisfying both the highly distinctive requirements of Rawlsian political liberalism and the importance accorded to truth by the conception of public deliberation held by most citizens. In this paper I argue that Cohen is unsuccessful in this attempt and that his political conception of truth cannot satisfy both political liberalism and a descriptively adequate specification of the importance accorded to truth by the familiar accounts of morally serious political deliberation upon which Cohen relies.

Research paper thumbnail of Finding Space for the Truth: Joshua Cohen on Truth and Public Reason

One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political liberalism is that truth h... more One of the most distinctive and startling claims of Rawlsian political
liberalism is that truth has no place in public political deliberation on matters of basic justice. Joshua Cohen thinks there is a tension between Rawls’s exclusion of truth in public political deliberation and the importance accorded to truth in the conception of morally serious political deliberation held by most citizens. Cohen claims that this apparent tension can be resolved by constructing and introducing a suitably political, non-divisive and neutral, conception of truth which is capable of satisfying both the highly distinctive requirements of Rawlsian political liberalism and the importance accorded to truth by the conception of public deliberation held by most citizens. In this paper I argue that Cohen is unsuccessful in this attempt and that his political conception of truth cannot satisfy both political liberalism and a descriptively adequate specification of the importance accorded to truth by the familiar accounts of morally serious political deliberation upon which Cohen relies.

Research paper thumbnail of Pluralism and Liberal Politics

There exists a common view that there is a sound and natural link between pluralism and liberalis... more There exists a common view that there is a sound and natural link between pluralism and liberalism. Indeed, though it may be the case that strong pluralists like Berlin and politically liberal pluralists like Rawls part company when it comes to talking about the nature and content of pluralism, most people think that they have in common the view that liberal commitments follow fairly naturally from pluralistic ones.

Research paper thumbnail of Natural Law Liberalism - By Christopher Wolfe

Philosophical Books, 2008