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E-grāmata: Authentic Tawney: A New Interpretation of the Political Thought of R.H. Tawney

  • Formāts: 192 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Nov-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Imprint Academic
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781845406202
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  • Formāts: 192 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Nov-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Imprint Academic
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781845406202

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Scholars of political thought based at Newcastle University, Armstrong and Gray analyze the political writings of British historian and social theorist Tawney (1880-62) chronologically to dispel the illusion of coherence that modern scholarship has constructed with bits and pieces from here and there. They challenge the conventional view by arguing that the various political ideas he proposed are not necessarily compatible, and that though he retained his faith throughout his life, he abandoned Christianity as an organizing principle and his early doctrine that politics without Christianity was deficient. Distributed in the US by Philosophy Documentation Center. Annotation ©2011 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
1 Introduction
1.1 Executive summary
9(1)
1.2 Tawney's importance
10(1)
1.3 A new approach to Tawney
11(2)
1.4 Commentators who make three erroneous assumptions of the essentialist approach to Tawney's political thought
13(8)
1.5 Theoretical reasons for rejecting the three erroneous assumptions
21(8)
2 The Pre-First World War Unpublished Writings
2.1 Introduction
29(1)
2.2 The Commonplace Book (the Diaries, 1912-1914)
30(13)
2.3 The New Leviathan (1910-1914)
43(5)
2.4 Conclusion
48(3)
3 The Road to The Acquisitive Society (1913-1921)
3.1 Introduction
51(1)
3.2 Poverty as an Industrial Problem (1913)
52(2)
3.3 The Attack (1916); Some Reflections of a Soldier (1916)
54(5)
3.4 A National College of All Souls (1917); The Conditions of Economic liberty (1918)
59(8)
3.5 The Acquisitive Society (1921)
67(21)
3.6 Conclusion
88(3)
4 Education: The Socialist Policy (1924); The British Labour Movement (1925)
4.1 Introduction
91(1)
4.2 Education; The Socialist Policy (1924)
92(11)
4.3 The British Labour Movement (1925)
103(4)
4.4 Conclusion
107(4)
5 Religion and the Rise of Capitalism (1926)
5.1 Introduction
111(1)
5.2 Links between medieval scholasticism and Tawney's doctrines of social function and avarice
112(5)
5.3 Post-medieval Church's capitulation to economic forces
117(3)
5.4 The modern Church's attempt at renewal
120(3)
5.5 Conclusion
123(2)
6 Equality (1931)
6.1 Introduction
125(2)
6.2 The concept of equal worth
127(3)
6.3 The content of equality
130(12)
6.4 The prospect for equality
142(1)
6.5 Conclusion
143(2)
7 Tawney's Essays Between 1934 and 1937
7.1 Introduction
145(1)
7.2 The Choice Before the Labour Party (1934)
146(10)
7.3 A Note on Christianity and the Social Order (1937)
156(4)
7.4 Conclusion
160(3)
8 Writings from 1938-1952
8.1 Introduction
163(2)
8.2 Revised edition of Equality (1938)
165(4)
8.3 Why Britain Fights (1940); We Mean Freedom (1944)
169(2)
8.4 Social Democracy in Britain (1949); British Socialism Today (1952); and the 1952 edition of Equality
171(8)
8.5 Conclusion
179(2)
9 Conclusion
9.1 Introduction
181(2)
9.2 Ethics
183(1)
9.3 Democracy
184(1)
9.4 Religion
185(2)
9.5 Politics
187(3)
9.6 Equality
190(1)
9.7 Liberty
191(2)
9.8 Implications for Tawney studies
193(2)
Bibliography 195(4)
Index 199