Aristocratic Voices: Forgotten Arguments about Virtue, Authority, and Inequality: Political Theory for Today
Editat de Richard Avramenko, Ethan Alexander-Davey Contribuţii de Matthew T. Cantirino, John Farrenkopf, Michael P. Federici, Michael P. Harding, Grant Havers, Rachel Hawks, Scott J. Irving, Patrick Macfarlane, Cary Joseph Nederman, Luke C. Sheahan, Mark Shiffman, Derek D. Turner, Steven Waldorfen Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 ian 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781666933147
ISBN-10: 1666933147
Pagini: 424
Dimensiuni: 160 x 232 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.76 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Political Theory for Today
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1666933147
Pagini: 424
Dimensiuni: 160 x 232 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.76 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Political Theory for Today
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1. Aristocrat as Citizen, Citizen as Aristocrat: Plutarch's Spartan, Rousseau's General Will, and Tocqueville's Americans
Chapter 2. Representation, Consent and the Aristocratic Ethos: Two Late Medieval Theories
Chapter 3. Consent of the Governed, Natural Law, and Religious Toleration in the Pre-Liberal Tradition
Chapter 4. Thomas Elyot and Self-Government - Why the Rulers of Realms Must also Rule Themselves
Part Two: Modern Aristocratic Voices
Chapter 5. Vico and the Aristocratic Origin of Political Order
Chapter 6. Newman's Fearful Gentleman: Discourse Eight of The Idea of a University
Chapter 7. W.H. Riehl's Cure for Modernity: A Defense of National, Regional, and Social Differentiation
Chapter 8. Henry Adams: An Aristocrat Out of Time
Chapter 9. Against the Tarantulas: Nietzsche on Aristocracy
Chapter 10. Irving Babbitt on Democracy and Leadership
Chapter 11. Oswald Spengler, Aristocratic Virtues, Democracy, and the Decline and Death Of The West
Chapter 12. Julius Evola's Aristocratic Critique of Machiavellianism
Chapter 13. Authority, Hierarchy, and the Social Bond in the Aristocratic Mind of Robert Nisbet
Chapter 2. Representation, Consent and the Aristocratic Ethos: Two Late Medieval Theories
Chapter 3. Consent of the Governed, Natural Law, and Religious Toleration in the Pre-Liberal Tradition
Chapter 4. Thomas Elyot and Self-Government - Why the Rulers of Realms Must also Rule Themselves
Part Two: Modern Aristocratic Voices
Chapter 5. Vico and the Aristocratic Origin of Political Order
Chapter 6. Newman's Fearful Gentleman: Discourse Eight of The Idea of a University
Chapter 7. W.H. Riehl's Cure for Modernity: A Defense of National, Regional, and Social Differentiation
Chapter 8. Henry Adams: An Aristocrat Out of Time
Chapter 9. Against the Tarantulas: Nietzsche on Aristocracy
Chapter 10. Irving Babbitt on Democracy and Leadership
Chapter 11. Oswald Spengler, Aristocratic Virtues, Democracy, and the Decline and Death Of The West
Chapter 12. Julius Evola's Aristocratic Critique of Machiavellianism
Chapter 13. Authority, Hierarchy, and the Social Bond in the Aristocratic Mind of Robert Nisbet
Recenzii
The crisis faced by liberal democracies over the past several years shows that, not only do leaders matter, but their character matters when it comes to promoting the common good. The crisis has sharpened to the point whereby widespread doubts concerning the ability of liberal democracies to produce virtuous leaders, rather than technocrats, experts, or oligarchs. This makes it necessary to consider long neglected aristocratic voices for understanding the true meaning of "rule of the best," and how it contributes to the good regime. Richard Avramenko and Ethan Alexander-Davey have convened a council of notables to stand upon the shoulders of ancient and modern giants of political thought, and to explore this important question of our time.
Aristocratic Voices: Forgotten Arguments about Virtue, Authority, and Inequality is a welcome antidote to the democratic excesses experienced today as manifested in political populism, mob rule, and a public rejection of expertise. In this collection of essays, we see the relevance of current and classical republican thought as articulated in the works of Aristotle, Plutarch, Nicholas of Cusa, Marsilius of Padua, Francisco Suarez, Giambattista Vico, Rousseau, Tocqueville, Mill, Henry Adams, Nietzsche, Irving Babbit, Robert Nisbet, and others. What this volume presents is the need for an engagement of aristocratic ideas to stimulate healthy discussion and debate in a democratic society, even if these elite ideas are ultimately discarded. Both timely and enduring, Aristocratic Voices: Forgotten Arguments about Virtue, Authority, and Inequality provides a pathway towards a vigorous and robust regime where both elites and the populace can rule together.
The thirteen essays in this sequel to Aristocratic Souls in Democratic Times constitute detailed meditations on Aristotle's timeless observation, that human beings are equal in some respects and unequal in others. In a context provided by thinkers for whom democracy is an alternative regime not the very definition of a just one, the contributors range widely over Western political thought and philosophy, often engaging with (perhaps unjustly) neglected authors to establish the continued legitimacy of aristocratic political thinking in today's democratic and not-so-democratic world.
Aristocratic Voices: Forgotten Arguments about Virtue, Authority, and Inequality is a welcome antidote to the democratic excesses experienced today as manifested in political populism, mob rule, and a public rejection of expertise. In this collection of essays, we see the relevance of current and classical republican thought as articulated in the works of Aristotle, Plutarch, Nicholas of Cusa, Marsilius of Padua, Francisco Suarez, Giambattista Vico, Rousseau, Tocqueville, Mill, Henry Adams, Nietzsche, Irving Babbit, Robert Nisbet, and others. What this volume presents is the need for an engagement of aristocratic ideas to stimulate healthy discussion and debate in a democratic society, even if these elite ideas are ultimately discarded. Both timely and enduring, Aristocratic Voices: Forgotten Arguments about Virtue, Authority, and Inequality provides a pathway towards a vigorous and robust regime where both elites and the populace can rule together.
The thirteen essays in this sequel to Aristocratic Souls in Democratic Times constitute detailed meditations on Aristotle's timeless observation, that human beings are equal in some respects and unequal in others. In a context provided by thinkers for whom democracy is an alternative regime not the very definition of a just one, the contributors range widely over Western political thought and philosophy, often engaging with (perhaps unjustly) neglected authors to establish the continued legitimacy of aristocratic political thinking in today's democratic and not-so-democratic world.