Why It's OK to Own a Gun

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A01=Ryan W. Davis
America
Assault Weapons
Assault Weapons Bans
Author_Ryan W. Davis
Basic Liberties
Category=QDTQ
Confers
Consequentialist Terms
Coup Stick
cultural identity formation
empirical social research
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Equal Possession
Ethics
Freedom
Gun Control
Gun Control Advocates
Gun Ownership
Gun Policy
Gun Regulation
Gun Rights
Large Capacity Magazines
Loving Guns
Mass Shootings
Michael Huemer
Mutual Domination
normative political theory
OK
philosophical perspectives on gun ownership
philosophy of everyday life
Plenty Coups
Private Firearms
Private Gun Ownership
republican liberty theory
Responsive Control
Rights
Second amendment
self-defence rights
Strict Libertarianism
Violated

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367141073
  • Weight: 226g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Why It’s OK to Own a Gun explores the right to self-defense, but also looks beyond it to what gun ownership fundamentally means in American life. Guns can provide a source of meaning that doesn’t depend on how much money you have or how important your job is. Guns can offer a sense of shared identity that’s not hung up on intellectual credentials or ideological orthodoxy. For many responsible gun owners, owning a gun is a way of positively reclaiming one’s own agency in the world.

It’s true that guns matter to only a minority of Americans, but the same could be said for many important political liberties. Like freedom of religion and freedom of expression, guns should be on the list of basic rights. In fact, they are: as some in America’s founding generation anticipated, gun rights have offered a bulwark for republican freedom. Because there is nothing morally wrong with any of these values, owning a gun is OK.

Key Features:

  • Discusses the grounds of the political rights of gun ownership
  • Connects the debate over guns with the sociology of gun ownership
  • Describes genuinely worthwhile features of a way of life that’s unfamiliar to many readers
  • Considers empirical and normative aspects of the gun debate
  • Thinks about individual rights in the context of state power

Ryan W. Davis is Associate Professor of Political Science at Brigham Young University. He is interested in how moral disagreements affect relationships and reasoning. Most of his work is connected to the value of autonomy in morality and politics. He has a PhD from Princeton University.

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