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Show Rationality and the Structure of the Self, Volume II: A Kantian Conception xxv particularly David Copp, Michael DePaul and William Tollhurst. Owen Flanagan and Ruth Anna Putnam offered many helpful suggestions. Work on Sections 2 and 3 of Chapter XI was supported by an NEH Summer Stipend in 1988 and the Woodrow Wilson International Scholars' Fellowship. These sections benefited from the comments of Anita Allen, Alison MacIntyre, John Pittman, and Kenneth Winkler. It was presented under the title, "Xenophobia and Kantian Rationalism" to the Wellesley Philosophy Department Faculty Seminar and to the Cornell University Philosophy Department in February 1992; and published under that title in Philosophical Forum XXIV, 1-3 (Fall-Spring 1992-93), 188-232; reprinted in Feminist Interpretations of Immanuel Kant, Ed. Robin May Schott (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1997), 21-73; and in AfricanAmerican Perspectives and Philosophical Traditions, Ed. John P. Pittman (New York: Routledge, 1997). It was also presented at the New York University Conference, What Does the Critique of Pure Reason Have To Do With the Pure Critique of Racism? A Look at the Work of Adrian Piper in October 1992. I learned much from discussion of these issues with commentators Paul Boghossian and William Ruddick of the NYU Philosophy Department. A revised version was delivered under the title, "A Kantian Analysis of Xenophobia," as the Plenary Address at the VII. Symposium der Internationalen Assoziation von Philosophinnen, in Vienna, Austria in September 1995; to the New York Institute for the Humanities at New York University in March 1996; and to the Humanities Institute at SUNY Stonybrook in September 1996. Work on Section 4 of this chapter was supported by the Mellon and Woodrow Wilson Fellowships, and published under the title, "Two Kinds of Discrimination," Yale Journal of Criticism 6, 1 (1993), 25-74; and reprinted in Race and Racism, ed. Bernard Boxill (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 193-237. Earlier versions were delivered to the Philosophy Department at George Washington University in November 1986, the Kennedy Institute of Ethics of Georgetown University in January 1987, to the Philosophy Departments at Howard University in October 1987, the University of Mississippi at Oxford in November 1987, the City College of New York, the University of Maryland, and the Boston Area Conference on Character and Morality in April 1988, hosted by Radcliffe and Wellesley Colleges, Nancy Sherman commenting; at the Symposium, Feminism and Racism, at the American Philosophical Association Eastern Division Convention, Washington, D. C. in December 1988; at Franklin and Marshall College in November 1989; Williams College, in January 1990; Western Michigan University in January 1990; and at the Conference, Ethics and Racism, at Brown University in March 1990. It has benefited from discussion with those audiences, and particularly from the remarks of Nancy Sherman and Kenneth Winkler. Laurence Thomas provided extensive comments on an earlier draft. Tamas Pataki extended himself far beyond the call of duty with not only penetrating comments and criticism but © Adrian Piper Research Archive Foundation Berlin |