A book by the Ahnishinahbæótjibway (“uh-nish-ih-NAH-bay-oht-JIB-way”) philosopher Wub-e-ke-niew is titled “We Have the Right to” this concept. For 10 points each:
[10h] Ernest Renan’s (“ruh-NAH’s”) “What Is a Nation?” states that a “moral conscience” requiring “the subordination of the individual to the communal good” implies the right to what concept, which Renan calls a “daily plebiscite” (“PLEB-uh-site”)?
ANSWER: existence [or the right to exist; or existence of a nation; accept We Have the Right to Exist; prompt on nationhood]
[10e] We Have the Right to Exist underlines the first letter of this word to distinguish the cyclical Ahnishinahbæótjibway (“uh-nish-ih-NAH-bay-oht-JIB-way”) version of this concept from the Euro-American version, which is conceived as an “arrow.”
ANSWER: time [accept arrow of time]
[10m] We Have the Right to Exist features a blurb by this cognitive scientist, whose 1971 debate with Michel Foucault (“foo-KOH”) positioned him as a champion of analytic philosophy.
ANSWER: Noam Chomsky [or Avram Noam Chomsky]
<Philosophy>