In Conversation: An OUP Podcast

Kimberley Brownlee, “Conscience and Conviction: The Case for Civil Disobedience” (Oxford UP, 2012)

25 snips
May 28, 2013
Ask episode
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
1
Introduction
00:00 • 2min
2
How Did You Come to Write Conscience and Conviction, the Case for Civil Disobedience?
01:55 • 3min
3
Why Do We Show Deference to People Who Affirm Conscience?
05:12 • 2min
4
How Many People Get Into Philosophy Through Epistemology?
06:52 • 3min
5
Aristotelian Commitments and Virtue Ethics
10:19 • 3min
6
Is There a Virtuous Person?
13:35 • 3min
7
Conscientious Moral Conviction
16:53 • 3min
8
What Is Conscientious Conviction?
20:14 • 3min
9
Conscientious Conviction
23:18 • 2min
10
Civil Disobedience, Conscience or Conviction?
25:10 • 4min
11
Civil Disobedience
28:57 • 3min
12
Civil Disobedience, Conscientious Objection
32:00 • 3min
13
Civil Disobedience Is a Nonviolent, Non-Hasting Resistance
34:40 • 2min
14
The Conviction Argument and Conscience-Driven Disobedience
36:41 • 5min
15
Ethics and Moral Responsibility in Public Offices
41:41 • 4min
16
The Demands of Conviction, Defense for Civil Disobedience
45:41 • 2min
17
The Demands of Conviction Defense
48:06 • 6min
18
Is Civil Disobedience a Need-Based Necessity?
53:44 • 2min
19
Is There a Moral Right to Civil Disobedience?
55:23 • 5min
20
Is There a Human Right Against Social Deprivation?
01:00:11 • 5min