Tocquevillian Ideas: Contemporary European Perspectives
Editat de Zbigniew Rau, Marek Tracz-Trynieckien Limba Engleză Hardback – apr 2014
Preț: 423.95 lei
Preț vechi: 616.03 lei
-31%
Puncte Express: 636
Preț estimativ în valută:
75.03€ • 87.69$ • 65.14£
75.03€ • 87.69$ • 65.14£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 19 februarie-05 martie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780761863144
ISBN-10: 0761863141
Pagini: 178
Dimensiuni: 150 x 232 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția University Press of America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0761863141
Pagini: 178
Dimensiuni: 150 x 232 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția University Press of America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
1. Tocqueville and Europe: What Can We Learn from Him about the Past, the Present and the Future of the Old Continent?
By Zbigniew Rau and Marek Tracz-Tryniecki
A prophet
The American Experience-Unity
European Experience-Diversity
The European Idea-Unity
Tocqueville and the Crisis of the European Integration Project
Concluding Remarks: Towards a Toquevillean Notion of European Unity
2. Tocqueville: A Thinker of Freedom
By Cengiz Çagla
Tocquevillian Liberty
State, Society and Democracy
Threats to Liberty in Democracies: Lefort and Richter readers of Tocqueville
Conclusion
3. Patriotism in Democracy: What We Learn from Tocqueville
By Ewa Atanassow
Political Sociology of Patriotism
Political Psychology of Patriotism
Psychology of Patriotism Reconsidered
Patriotism in Democracy
In Conclusion: What do we learn from Tocqueville?
4. Tocqueville on Citizen Participation
By Marinus R.R. Ossewaarde
Introduction
Citizen participation according to Tocqueville
Citizen participation and the era of global capitalism
Citizen participation, nature and the state
Citizen participation and the divine significance of democracy
Citizen participation and the heroism of reason
Some further reflections on freedom
5. Tocqueville and the Democratic Churning
By Attila K. Molnár
The upgraduation of democracy
What is democracy, and what is not.
Individualism-the ens completum
The multitude
Collectivist individualism
Beautiful democracy?
6. Religion, Virtue and the Ennobling of Democracy: Tocqueville's Vision of Civic Society
By Oliver Hidalgo
The Problem of Modern Civil Society: Freedom vs. Equality
Religion and Virtue as Conditions of a Free Civil Society
Catholicism against Pantheism
Conclusion: Ennobling Democracy
7. Human Dignity versus Greatness: Tocqueville's Dilemma
By Marek Tracz-Tryniecki
Human dignity
Greatness
Algeria
Conclusion
8. The American Melting Pot as Reductionist Kettle: Religious Liberty's Worrisome Condition
By William R. Stevenson, Jr
Bibliography
List of Authors
Information on the Alexis de Tocqueville Centre for Political and Legal Thought
By Zbigniew Rau and Marek Tracz-Tryniecki
A prophet
The American Experience-Unity
European Experience-Diversity
The European Idea-Unity
Tocqueville and the Crisis of the European Integration Project
Concluding Remarks: Towards a Toquevillean Notion of European Unity
2. Tocqueville: A Thinker of Freedom
By Cengiz Çagla
Tocquevillian Liberty
State, Society and Democracy
Threats to Liberty in Democracies: Lefort and Richter readers of Tocqueville
Conclusion
3. Patriotism in Democracy: What We Learn from Tocqueville
By Ewa Atanassow
Political Sociology of Patriotism
Political Psychology of Patriotism
Psychology of Patriotism Reconsidered
Patriotism in Democracy
In Conclusion: What do we learn from Tocqueville?
4. Tocqueville on Citizen Participation
By Marinus R.R. Ossewaarde
Introduction
Citizen participation according to Tocqueville
Citizen participation and the era of global capitalism
Citizen participation, nature and the state
Citizen participation and the divine significance of democracy
Citizen participation and the heroism of reason
Some further reflections on freedom
5. Tocqueville and the Democratic Churning
By Attila K. Molnár
The upgraduation of democracy
What is democracy, and what is not.
Individualism-the ens completum
The multitude
Collectivist individualism
Beautiful democracy?
6. Religion, Virtue and the Ennobling of Democracy: Tocqueville's Vision of Civic Society
By Oliver Hidalgo
The Problem of Modern Civil Society: Freedom vs. Equality
Religion and Virtue as Conditions of a Free Civil Society
Catholicism against Pantheism
Conclusion: Ennobling Democracy
7. Human Dignity versus Greatness: Tocqueville's Dilemma
By Marek Tracz-Tryniecki
Human dignity
Greatness
Algeria
Conclusion
8. The American Melting Pot as Reductionist Kettle: Religious Liberty's Worrisome Condition
By William R. Stevenson, Jr
Bibliography
List of Authors
Information on the Alexis de Tocqueville Centre for Political and Legal Thought
Recenzii
Tocquevillian Ideas: Contemporary European Perspectives would be beneficial for postgraduate students and those who are interested in the effects of Tocqueville's ideas on democracy and freedom in the last century; the book provides an almost comprehensive outline of the main themes in Tocqueville's thought.
The eight authors who reflect on Tocqueville in this book provide an authentic and effective reminder of the relevance of Tocqueville's observation that tyranny may appear in places we least expect to see it: in democratic societies. In the best tradition of humanistic enquiry, these authors speak about the fundamentals and teach these fundamentals to the reader.
Alexis de Tocqueville is the perennial social philosopher for our time. This collection of essays shows his abiding importance for the present, but also for the future of those Western societies that pride themselves on their attachment to liberty but are plainly succumbing to every single temptation that Tocqueville identified as a likely problem for democracy. The editors of this fine book have performed a great service for the cause of freedom.
The eight authors who reflect on Tocqueville in this book provide an authentic and effective reminder of the relevance of Tocqueville's observation that tyranny may appear in places we least expect to see it: in democratic societies. In the best tradition of humanistic enquiry, these authors speak about the fundamentals and teach these fundamentals to the reader.
Alexis de Tocqueville is the perennial social philosopher for our time. This collection of essays shows his abiding importance for the present, but also for the future of those Western societies that pride themselves on their attachment to liberty but are plainly succumbing to every single temptation that Tocqueville identified as a likely problem for democracy. The editors of this fine book have performed a great service for the cause of freedom.