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El. knyga: Origins of Free Peoples

  • Formatas: 174 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-May-2011
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781441141576
  • Formatas: 174 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-May-2011
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781441141576

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The Origins of Free Peoples posits demonstrates that free peoples are always being liberated and are never already free. Free peoples make freedom paramount over justice, equality, or other value values. The history of such peoples is different from their origins, which are always underway as free people must construct both their history and their Others. It is not simply that they become threatened; they must face the correct kind of threat.

The book examines how freedom is discussed in classic and contemporary Anglo-American texts which argue , arguing the notion that freedom is natural and needs only to be guaranteed by limited government. Using a Continental and postmodernist approach, the book offers an alternative conceptualization of the discourses and practices of freedom represented in the writings of theorists such as Locke, Rawls, Benn, and Swanton. With its distinctive position in the discussion of freedom, The Origins of Free Peoples will appeal to social political theorists, political philosophers as well as to those looking to understand the main factors needed to genuinely liberate a people.

Recenzijos

Writing with admirable clarity, Jason Caro gives us a subtle and original argument. He offers fascinating insights into the replication of practices that are required to constitute free peoples but that never eliminate the always-present threats that are the other side of their freedom. He also throws new light onto the arguments of a number of  political philosophers, past and present, including Locke and the threat posed by the now forgotten absolutist view of freedom.- Carole Pateman, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, UCLA.

Daugiau informacijos

Deconstructs Anglo-American texts that posit freedom as natural to show that free peoples must construct their history and their Others to count themselves as free.
Acknowledgments ix
Preface xi
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(25)
Chronology
5(4)
Synecdoche
9(4)
Indictment
13(8)
How Did This Study Originate?
21(5)
Chapter 2 Prerevolutionary Liberty
26(25)
Hypothesis
29(2)
Sovereignty
31(4)
Liberty as Grant
35(3)
Tyranny of the Laws
38(3)
Examples
41(4)
Ramifications
45(6)
Chapter 3 That Other Liberty
51(20)
Lockes First Satire
56(11)
Ramifications
67(4)
Chapter 4 A Theory of Liberation
71(33)
Benn: Proto-freedom
75(5)
Benn: Anti-freedom
80(3)
Benn: Full Freedom
83(2)
Swanton: Introduction
85(1)
Swanton: Proto-freedom
86(4)
Swanton: Anti-freedom
90(8)
Conclusion
98(6)
Chapter 5 Secrets of Freedom
104(31)
Perfect Origins
108(4)
Definitions
112(3)
Perfecting the Past
115(9)
Perfecting the Present
124(11)
Chapter 6 The Fate of Freedom
135(9)
Bibliography 144(11)
Index 155
Jason Caro is assistant professor of political science at the University of Houston-Downtown where he writes political theory, usually with a Continental approach. He teaches courses in American Political Thought and Political Theory.