Martha Nussbaum critiqued this tradition’s bifurcation of the duties of justice and material aid in a book that calls it a “noble but flawed ideal.” For 10 points each:
[10m] What tradition names a “right” outlined in Kant’s Perpetual Peace? A 2006 book titled for this “caring” and “curious” tradition builds on the dying words of the author’s father, a Gold Coast independence leader.
ANSWER: cosmopolitanism [accept Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers, cosmopolitan right, cosmopolitan law, ius cosmopoliticum, or The Cosmopolitan Tradition]
[10e] Both Kwame Appiah’s Cosmopolitanism and Martha Nussbaum’s The Cosmopolitan Tradition draw on this Scottish author of The Theory of Moral Sentiments.
ANSWER: Adam Smith
[10h] Nussbaum credits this thinker with bringing the tradition into the modern world with the etiamsi daremus argumentative move, in which he held that norms would still exist “even if we should concede… that there is no God.”
ANSWER: Hugo Grotius [or Hugo de Groot; or Huig de Groot]
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