Politics without Vision
Thinking without a Banister in the Twentieth Century
Politics without Vision
Thinking without a Banister in the Twentieth Century
From Plato through the nineteenth century, the West could draw on comprehensive political visions to guide government and society. Now, for the first time in more than two thousand years, Tracy B. Strong contends, we have lost our foundational supports. In the words of Hannah Arendt, the state of political thought in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries has left us effectively “thinking without a banister.”
Read the Introduction.
424 pages | 7 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2012
Philosophy: General Philosophy, History and Classic Works, Philosophy of Society
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Table of Contents
NOTE ON SOURCES AND ABBREVIATIONS
INTRODUCTION
The World as We Find It
ONE
Kant and the Death of God
TWO
Nietzsche: The Tragic Ethos and the Spirit of Music
THREE
Max Weber, Magic, and the Politics of Social Scientific Objectivity
INTERLUDE
“What Have We to Do with Morals?” Nietzsche and Weber on the Politics of Morality
FOUR
Sigmund Freud and the Heroism of Knowledge
FIVE
Lenin and the Calling of the Party
SIX
Carl Schmitt and the Exceptional Sovereign
SEVEN
Martin Heidegger and the Space of the Political
EIGHT
Without a Banister: Hannah Arendt and Roads Not Taken
NINE
Conclusion: The World as It Finds Us
NOTES
INDEX
Awards
Foundations of Political Theory section, American Political Science Association: David Easton Award
Won
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