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Democracy Reconsidered [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 292 pages, height x width x depth: 241x162x27 mm, weight: 567 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Jul-2009
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 0739124803
  • ISBN-13: 9780739124802
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  • Cena: 144,45 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 292 pages, height x width x depth: 241x162x27 mm, weight: 567 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Jul-2009
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 0739124803
  • ISBN-13: 9780739124802
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Democracy Reconsidered provides an enlightening study of democracy in America's post-modern context. Elizabeth Kaufer Busch and Peter Augustine Lawler explore some of the foundational principles of democracy as they have been borne out in American society. The essays included in this volume examine the lessons that novelists, philosophers, and political theorists have for democratic societies as they progress towards postmodern skepticism or even disbelief in the absolute principles that form the foundation of democracies. Led by the provocative observations of Lawler, a member of President Bush's Council on Bioethics, the first section lays out the predicament caused by the gravitation of democracy towards a disbelief in absolute truth, leading to a "crisis of self-evidence." The second section searches for tools that one might use to restore health to the individual and community within American democracy, including spiritual faith, creative autonomy, and philosophic inquiry. The third section addresses the supposed "crisis in liberal education" caused by our "crisis of self-evidence." Included essays explore the extent to which the professed aims of liberal education may be at odds with the cultivation of dutiful citizens. The book closes by considering some of the political consequences of employing content-less freedom as the primary standard by which human behaviour is judged.

Recenzijas

The contributors to this fine collection offer a Tocquevillian reflection on democracy in America today in two respects: their investigation of thought and its relation to political action comprehends philosophy, science, religion, and the fine arts; and they write as friends of democracy who address what they regard as contemporary challenges to American government. -- Murray Dry, Middlebury College Democracy Reconsidered is a remarkably lively and wide-ranging collection of essays that addresses the impact of democratic relativism on the modernand Americancharacter and soul. Whether exploring the contemporary crisis of self-evidence, the thought of Rorty, Montaigne, Tocqueville, and Strauss, or the role that liberal education can play in opening up democratic hearts and minds, these essays instruct, provoke, and charm. -- Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College

Introduction: Why a Reconsideration of Democracy Is Needed, vii
Elizabeth Kaufer Busch
Part One Democratic Relativism: A Crisis of Self-Evidence
1 Our Crisis of Self-Evidence,
3
Peter Augustine Lawler
2 The American Context of Leo Strauss's Natural Right and History,
13
James W. Ceaser
3 Gender Feminism in America: A Reconsideration of Nietzsche's Anti-feminism,
27
Elizabeth Kaufer Busch
4 Anti-Snobs and Anti-Artists,
49
Martha Bayles
49
Part Two Democracy's Transformation of the Human Character and Soul
5 Autonomy and Cruelty: Rorty and Montaigne on the Social Bond,
67
Ann Hartle
6 Democracy and Philosophy as a Way of Life,
79
Michael Papazian
7 A Tale of Two Liberals: Rediscovering American Liberalism in Flannery O'Connor's The Barber,
87
David Ramsey
8 The Rift in the Modern Mind: Tocqueville and Percy on the Rise of the Cartesian Self,
101
Matthew Sitman and Brian Smith
Part Three Educating the Democratic Mind and Spirit
9 Religion and Community in Liberal Education and Liberal Democracy,
121
Joseph M. Knippenberg
10 A Plea to Protect and Promote the Small Liberal Arts College as Such,
137
John Seery
11 Liberal Education and the Democratic Man,
147
Carl Eric Scott
12 Liberal Education: A Friendly Critic of Liberal Democracy,
155
Gayle McKeen
Part Four Democracy in American Politics and Society
13 Friendly Critics: Tocqueville and Croly on American Political Parties,
173
David Alvis
14 Bioethics and the American Character,
193
Eric Cohen
with a response by Eric Stone entitled "Of Revulsion and Joy"
210
15 Progress or Tyranny? The Goodridge Dissents,
215
Paul Seaton
16 Women against Liberation: Opposing Feminism in a Democratic Age,
233
Jocelyn Jones Evans
Bibliography 261
Index of Proper Names 275
Elizabeth Kaufer Busch is assistant professor of American Studies and Government and co-director of the Center for American Studies and Civic Leadership at Christopher Newport University. Peter Augustine Lawler is Dana Professor of Government at Berry College.