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Intro; Preface; Contents; Abbreviations; Part I: Lecture; Part II: Colloquium; Part III: Reply Essay; Chapter 1: Freedom and Other Robustly Demanding Goods; Chapter 2: Rule-Following and A Priori Biconditionals - A Sea of Tears?; Chapter 3: Pettit's Mixed Causal Descriptivism: Feeling Blue; Chapter 4: Discovering the Properties of 'Qualia' in Pettit's Theory of Phenomenal Consciousness; Chapter 5: Playing Pong with the Mind? Pettit's Program Model and Mental Causation; Chapter 6: Notes on Pettit's Concept of Orthonomy

Chapter 7: Two Problems of Value-Monistic Consequentialism in Philip Pettit's Theory of Criminal JusticeChapter 8: Indirect Consequentialism and Moral Psychology; Chapter 9: What Is the Foundation of Pettit's Non-redundant Realism About Group Agents?; Chapter 10: Pluralism Across Domains; Chapter 11: Which Liberalism, Which Republicanism? Constructing Traditions of Political Thought with Philip Pettit; Chapter 12: Focusing on the Eyeball Test: A Problematic Testing Device in Philip Pettit's Theory of Justice; Chapter 13: Self-defense on Five Fronts: A Reply to My Commentators

1.1 Robustly Demanding Freedom1.2 Other Robustly Demanding Goods; 1.3 The Implications for Consequentialism; References; 2.1 Pettit's Solution to the Problem of Rule-following: Response-Dependence; 2.2 What Is Response-Dependence?; 2.3 Conclusion; References; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Pettit's Presentation of Stalnaker's Objections against RD; 3.3 Pettit's Story in Ten Stages; 3.4 Critical Examination of Pettit's Proposed Solution; References; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Qualia; 4.3 Pettit on Phenomenal Consciousness - A Brief Summary; 4.4 Perceptual Content and Qualia; 4.5 Conclusion; Reference

5.1 Introduction5.2 Pettit's Program Model; 5.3 Objection; 5.4 Conclusion; References; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 The Strict Background View of Desire; 6.3 Orthonomy; 6.4 Criticism and Open Questions; References; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 A Comprehensive Theory: Value Monism; 7.3 Consequentialism: Promoting, Not Honoring; 7.4 Three Requirements of a Monist Criterion; 7.5 The Promotion of Dominion: A Monist Criterion for the Criminal Justice System; 7.6 Promotion of 'Dominion' and Rights; 7.7 The Promotion of 'Dominion': Too Vague and Too Demanding?; References; 8.1 Introduction

8.2 Pettit's Definition of Consequentialism8.3 Moral Psychology and Indirect Consequentialism; 8.4 Recurring Objections; 8.5 Conclusion; References; 9.1 Introduction; 9.2 Mapping the Debate; 9.3 The Relationship of Ontology and Methodology; 9.4 From Simple Agential Systems...; 9.5 ...to Group Agents; 9.6 Conclusion; References; 10.1 The Program Architecture Contra Methodological Individualism; 10.2 Group Agency Cum Methodological Individualism; 10.3 Group Responsibility and Higher-Level Control; 10.4 For a Methodological Pluralism; References; 11.1 Introduction; 11.2 Which Liberalism?

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