Calhoun objects that the search for a "moral self" is overly intellectual and needlessly abstract.
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Q12: Calhoun regards one's identification with particular social
Q13: Calhoun would likely deny that there are
Q14: In focusing excessively on our differences, we
Q15: Our preferences may themselves be the product
Q16: Calhoun would likely agree that social structures
Q18: Calhoun argues for something modest: we must
Q19: Calhoun regards the project of identifying a
Q20: Calhoun believes that non-philosophic factors, like one's
Q21: Why, according to Calhoun, are theorists interested
Q22: Calhoun claims that attempts to end bias
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