Douglas P. Lackey

Douglas P. Lackey is a US philosopher and playwright.[1]He is also a Professor at CUNY Baruch College.

As a graduate student, he studied under J. N. Findlay at Yale University. His post-graduate work on the ethics of nuclear warfare was influenced by his attention to earlier works by Bertrand Russell.[1] His drama Kaddish in East Jerusalem was produced in 2003.[1] The play was later expanded and revised as The Gandhi Nonviolent Soccer Club.[1]

Lackey divides pacifism into four categories: a universal, Christian view in which all killing is wrong; a universal, Gandhi-based system in which all violence is wrong; private pacificism, following Saint Augustine in seeing personal violence as universally wrong but political violence as sometimes acceptable; and anti-war pacifism, in which personal violence is at times justifiable, but war is never so.[2]

Works

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 "The Department of Philosophy". Baruch College. Retrieved 2010-05-13.
  2. Shin Chiba, Thomas J. Schoenbaum (2008). Peace movements and pacifism after September 11. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-84720-667-1.

References

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