Social philosophy
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Social philosophy is the philosophical study of interesting questions about social behavior (typically, of humans). Social philosophy addresses a wide range of subjects, from individual meanings to legitimacy of laws, from the social contract to criteria for revolution, from the functions of everyday actions to the effects of science on culture, from changes in human demographics to the collective order of a wasp's nest.
[edit] Subdisciplines
Socail Philosophy: the application of moral principles to the problems of freedom, equality, justice and the state.
[edit] Relevant issues in social philosophy
Some of the topics dealt with by social philosophy are:
- Agency and free will
- The will to power
- Accountability
- Speech acts
- Situationism
- Modernism and Postmodernism
- individualism
- crowds
- property
- rights
- authority
- free will
- ideologies
- cultural criticism
[edit] Social philosophers
- Socrates
- Plato
- Chanakya
- Confucius
- Thiruvalluvar
- Thomas Hobbes
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- John Locke
- Karl Marx
- Mikhail Bakunin
- Émile Durkheim
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman
- Max Weber
- Georg Lukács
- Vivekananda
- Antonie Pannekoek
- Noam Chomsky
- Simone de Beauvoir
- Catharine MacKinnon
- Cornelius Castoriadis
- Guy Debord
- Terry Eagleton
- John Ralston Saul
- Spencer Heath
Philosophical topics |