
The eBooks we sell are sold as a single-user licence and are intended for the end user only.
The sale of some eBooks are restricted to certain countries. To alert you to such restrictions, please select the country of the billing address of your credit or debit card you wish to use for payment.
For further information see https://www.wildy.com/ebook-formats
Once the order is confirmed an e-mail will be sent to you to allow you to download the eBook. For UK purchases this will be automatic. For purchases outside the UK a member of staff will need to confirm the sale. (Staff are available to do this during normal business hours, Mon-Fri 8:30-17:00 UK time)
All eBooks are supplied firm sale and cannot be returned. If you believe there is a fault with your eBook then contact us on ebooks@wildy.com and we will help in resolving the issue. This does not affect your statutory rights.
Due to a technical issue some ebooks are not available to order.
The meaning of a text is shaped by various factors, including the language used, the cultural context, and the reader's background experience; it will be different not only to different people but also to the same person at different times. 'Attunement' is a way of paying attention to these fluid meanings. And, as this book shows, one perhaps surprising but practical reason for engaging in attunement is to learn to do justice to ourselves and to others. Attending to the motion of meaning can help us become more fully aware of an activity that all of us engage in all the time: the activity of constituting others and ourselves when we use our language. This is equally true at the level of a simple conversation between two people and at the level of establishing a national constitution.
Justice as Attunement, then, is a book about transforming constitutions across the range of human relations - constitutions of language and community: for, Richard Dawson suggests, the root of justice has to do with constituting appropriate selves and relations.