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  1.  14
    Of Love and Music in Book 5 of Rousseau's the Confessions.Üner Daglier - 2023 - Philosophy and Literature 47 (2):265-279.
    Abstract:In book 5 of his historically controversial autobiography, the Confessions, Jean-Jacques Rousseau describes his involvement in a perfectly harmonious ménage à trois centered around the charming Mme. de Warens. Despite his assertions to the contrary, however, the text indicates that Rousseau harbored jealous feelings and banked on Mme. de Warens's passion for music to gain an edge over his rival, Claude Anet. But Rousseau's apparently sincere denial of jealous feelings and lost hold over Mme. de Warens's romantic imagination after Anet's (...)
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  2.  19
    John Stuart Mill’s “Religion of Humanity” Revisited.Üner Daglier & Thomas E. Schneider - 2007 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 19 (4):577-588.
    ABSTRACT John Stuart Mill’s posthumously published Three Essays on Religion have been seen as standing in a problematical relationship with his better‐known works, especially On Liberty, which emphasize the negative sides of Mill’s approach to religion. The Three Essays are less easy to characterize. A careful reading shows Mill’s concern to subject religious views to rational scrutiny, but also to acknowledge the important and largely beneficent role religion has played, and presumably will continue to play, in human affairs. This role (...)
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  3.  13
    Tocqueville, Democratic Poetry, and the Religion of Humanity.Üner Daglier - 2022 - Utilitas 34 (1):1-18.
    The Religion of Humanity has typically been associated with Auguste Comte's positivism. Within liberal philosophical debate, John Stuart Mill's measured advocacy for it has received some attention, especially given his otherwise well-known emphasis on the tension between religion and liberty. Yet Alexis de Tocqueville's perceptive awareness of the Religion of Humanity as an evolving phenomenon, expressed through his discussion of democratic poetry, remained largely unnoticed. Of course, Tocqueville's essential religio-political task was to promote a modified version of Christianity and buttress (...)
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  4. Eros Turannos: Leo Strauss and Alexandre Kojève Debate on Tyranny. [REVIEW]Üner Daglier - 2007 - Interpretation 34 (3):283-288.
     
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  5. Orientalism and Islam: European Thinkers on Oriental Despotism in the Middle East and India. [REVIEW]Üner Daglier - 2010 - Interpretation 37 (3):333-338.
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