Inventors of ideas: introduction to political thought
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston, MA
Cengage
[2024]
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Ausgabe: | Fourth edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Previous edition: published as by Donald Tannenbaum. Australia: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2012 |
Beschreibung: | Seiten illustrations 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9780357660331 |
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adam_text | Contents Preface xvii About the Authors xxiii 1. The History of Political Thought: Introducing the Challenge 1 Introduction.................................................................................. 1 The “Western Canon”.................................................................. 4 Why Study the History of PoliticalThought?............................. 6 Interpreting the Texts.................................................................. 8 Development of Political ThoughtOver Time........................... 11 Techniques for Reconciling Conflict Between Beliefs .... 11 Comparing Thinkers and TheirEras........................................ 14 Conclusion ................................................................................ 16 Key Terms................................................................................... 18 Notes..........................................................................................19 Additional Readings................................................................... 20 2. Plato: Navigating Justice 21 Introduction............................................................................ 21 Plato’s Method......................................................................... 24 Knowledge and Justice.............................................................26 Human Nature......................................................................... 27 The Ideal City.............................................................................27 Inevitable Decline of the Ideal
Regime................................... 33 Conclusion................................................................................ 34 Key Terms................................................................................... 36 Notes.......................................................................................... 36 Additional Readings................................................................ 37 3. Aristotle: The Good City 39 Introduction................................................................................ 39 Aristotle’s Method................................................................... 41 vii
viii Contents Happiness, Values, and Human Nature.................................. 42 Political Economy..................................................................... 44 Community.............................................................................. 46 Political Form of the Polis ..................................................... 51 Political Change ..................................................................... 54 Conclusion.............................................................................. 56 Key Terms.................................................................................. 58 Notes........................................................................................ 58 Additional Readings............................................................... 60 4. Cicero: Citizenship and the Republic 61 Introduction............................................................................... 61 Cicero’s Method........................................................................ 64 Human Nature: Natural Law, Equality, and Sociability ... 67 Government............................................................................... 70 Law............................................................................................ 73 Public and Private and the Law............................................... 75 Conclusion............................................................................... 77 Key Terms.................................................................................. 79
Notes......................................................................................... 80 Additional Readings................................................................... 82 5. Augustine: Living Together 83 Introduction................................................................................83 Augustine’s Method................................................................... 88 Human Nature......................................................................... 91 Government................................................................................96 Law...........................................................................................102 Conclusion.............................................................................. 103 Key Terms................................................................................. 105 Notes....................................................................................... 106 Additional Readings.............................................................. 108 6. Aquinas: Reconciling Human and Divine 109 Introduction........................................................................... 109 Aquinas’s Method.................................................................... Ill Human Nature........................................................................115 Society and the Church........................................................... 117 Government.............................................................................. 122
Law........................................................................................... 127 Conclusion.............................................................................. 132 Key Terms................................................................................. 133 Notes........................................................................................134 Additional Readings.............................................................. 135
Contents ix 7. Luther and Calvin: Reconfiguring Authority 137 Introduction...........................................................................137 Lives and Works....................................................................... 140 Methods................................................................................. 142 Human Nature....................................................................... 144 Law.......................................................................................... 148 Society and Religion................................................................. 152 Government...........................................................................154 Economics................................................................................. 161 Women and the Family........................................................... 162 Conclusion .............................................................................. 165 Key Terms................................................................................. 167 Notes....................................................................................... 167 Additional Readings................................................................. 169 8. Machiavelli: Theorizing Power 171 Introduction..............................................................................171 Machiavelli’s Reputation and Major Works........................... 174 Machiavelli’s Method: Political Realism or Moral Cynicism?.................................................................... 176 Human
Nature....................................................................... 178 Power....................................................................................... 180 The Players: Princes, Nobles, and the People........................ 182 Fortune and Virtue................................................................. 184 Machiavelli’s Complicated Gender Politics........................... 185 Liberty and War....................................................................... 187 Forms of Government.............................................................. 188 Conclusion.............................................................................. 193 Key Terms................................................................................. 195 Notes....................................................................................... 195 Additional Readings................................................................. 197 9. Christine de Pizan: Difference and Equality 198 Introduction.............................................................................. 198 Christine’s Method................................................................. 201 The Mirror for Princes.......................................................... 204 Human Nature....................................................................... 207 Power and Authority.............................................................. 209 Conclusion.............................................................................. 212 Key
Terms................................................................................. 213 Notes....................................................................................... 214 Additional Readings................................................................. 215
x Contents 10. Hobbes: Keeping Promises, Keeping Order 217 Introduction............................................................................ 217 Hobbes’s Method................................................................... 221 Human Nature...................................................................... 223 State of Nature...................................................................... 224 Basis of Government and Political Obligation....................... 226 The Sovereign......................................................................... 228 Natural and Civil Law......................................................... 230 Liberty................................................................................... 231 Citizenship, Gender, and Subordination................................ 232 Forms of Government............................................................. 235 Conclusion............................................................................. 236 Key Terms................................................................................ 237 Notes...................................................................................... 237 Additional Readings............................................................. 239 11. al-Fārābī: Philosophy of Society 240 Introduction............................................................................. 240 The Second Master................................................................ 241 Method................................................................................... 245
Human Nature....................................................................... 247 Philosophy of Society............................................................. 252 Enduring Influence................................................................ 255 Key Terms................................................................................ 256 Notes....................................................................................... 256 Additional Readings.................................................................257 12. Locke: The Social Contract and Its Limits 258 Introduction............................................................................. 258 Locke’s Method....................................................................... 261 Human Nature....................................................................... 262 The State of Nature................................................................. 264 State of War..............................................................................270 Basis of Government.............................................................. 271 Religious Toleration................................................................. 272 Equality, Subordination, andCitizenship............................... 275 Institutions and Forms of Government................................. 279 Despotism and Revolution.................................................... 280 Conclusion.............................................................................. 282 Key
Terms................................................................................. 284 Notes....................................................................................... 284 Additional Readings................................................................. 286
Contents xi 13. Rousseau: Making the Good Citizen 287 Introduction..............................................................................287 Rousseau’s Method................................................................. 289 State of Nature and Human Nature........................................ 290 The Path to Liberation........................................................... 296 The Social Contract................................................................. 297 Citizenship, Gender, and Education........................................ 304 Necessary Conditions for Securing a Contract.................... 309 Executive Institutions.............................................................. 311 Forms of Government.............................................................. 312 Conclusion..............................................................................314 Key Terms................................................................................. 316 Notes....................................................................................... 316 Additional Readings................................................................. 318 14. Mary Wollstonecraft: Turning Toward Equality 319 Introduction..............................................................................319 The Social Contract and the Sexual Contract........................ 322 Wollstonecraft’s Method........................................................325 Human Nature....................................................................... 327 Gender Relations and Power
Dynamics .............................. 330 The Liberation of Women.................................................... 332 Civil Society.......................................................................... 335 Conclusion ..............................................................................337 Key Terms................................................................................. 339 Notes....................................................................................... 339 Additional Readings.............................................................. 340 15. Burke: Change and Tradition 341 Introduction..............................................................................341 Burke’s Method....................................................................... 344 Human Nature....................................................................... 346 Society.................................................................................... 349 Government..............................................................................354 Regime Types.......................................................................... 357 Economics.............................................................................. 360 Conclusion..............................................................................361 Key Terms................................................................................. 363 Notes....................................................................................... 363 Additional
Readings.............................................................. 365
xii Contents 16. Mill and Taylor Mill: Advancing Liberty 366 Introduction............................................................................ 366 Utilitarianism......................................................................... 369 Mill’s Revision of Utilitarianism.......................................... 373 Human Nature...................................................................... 376 Equality and Difference:Gender, Class, and Colonialism . . 378 Tyranny of the Majority.......................................................383 Liberty................................................................................... 385 Truth...................................................................................... 388 Government.......................................................................... 389 Political Economy................................................................ 393 Conclusion............................................................................. 394 Key Terms................................................................................ 395 Notes.......................................................................................396 Additional Readings............................................................. 397 17. Marx: Class Conflict, History, and Political Economy 399 Introduction............................................................................. 399 Marx’s Critique....................................................................... 402 Method: From Hegel to
Marx............................................. 406 Stages of History.................................................................... 408 Poverty, Alienation, Exploitation.......................................... 413 Scientific Socialism.................................................................417 Gender Relations and the Family.......................................... 418 The Future............................................................................. 420 Conclusion............................................................................. 423 Key Terms.................................................................................425 Notes....................................................................................... 426 Additional Readings.............................................................. 428 18. Friedrich Nietzsche and Sigmund Freud: Critical Perspectives 429 Introduction..............................................................................429 Friedrich Nietzsche................................................................. 431 Sigmund Freud....................................................................... 434 New Theories.......................................................................... 438 Liberatory Theory.................................................................... 442 Conclusion.............................................................................. 444 Key Terms................................................................................. 446
Notes....................................................................................... 447 Additional Readings.............................................................. 448
Contents xiii 19. Political Thought in the Twentieth Century: Liberalism and Its Critics 450 Introduction..............................................................................450 Liberalism: A Big Tent.............................................................. 451 Rawls and Public Reason Liberalism..................................... 458 Critics and Countercurrents..................................................... 462 Liberal Feminism and The Sexual Contract........................... 467 Twentieth-Century Voices........................................................ 471 Conclusion..............................................................................475 Key Terms................................................................................. 476 Notes....................................................................................... 477 Additional Readings................................................................. 479 20. Political Thought in the 21st Century 480 Introduction..............................................................................480 Current Trends: Subject Matter.............................................. 481 Current Trends: Methods and Approaches........................... 485 Dominant Schools of Thought: Civic Republicanism and Democratic Theory................................. 488 Recent Developments in Established Specializations .... 494 Emerging Specializations and Future Directions.....................502 Conclusion............................................................................. 506 Key
Terms................................................................................. 506 Notes....................................................................................... 507 Additional Readings................................................................. 510 Glossary 511 Index 532
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adam_txt |
Contents Preface xvii About the Authors xxiii 1. The History of Political Thought: Introducing the Challenge 1 Introduction. 1 The “Western Canon”. 4 Why Study the History of PoliticalThought?. 6 Interpreting the Texts. 8 Development of Political ThoughtOver Time. 11 Techniques for Reconciling Conflict Between Beliefs . 11 Comparing Thinkers and TheirEras. 14 Conclusion . 16 Key Terms. 18 Notes.19 Additional Readings. 20 2. Plato: Navigating Justice 21 Introduction. 21 Plato’s Method. 24 Knowledge and Justice.26 Human Nature. 27 The Ideal City.27 Inevitable Decline of the Ideal
Regime. 33 Conclusion. 34 Key Terms. 36 Notes. 36 Additional Readings. 37 3. Aristotle: The Good City 39 Introduction. 39 Aristotle’s Method. 41 vii
viii Contents Happiness, Values, and Human Nature. 42 Political Economy. 44 Community. 46 Political Form of the Polis . 51 Political Change . 54 Conclusion. 56 Key Terms. 58 Notes. 58 Additional Readings. 60 4. Cicero: Citizenship and the Republic 61 Introduction. 61 Cicero’s Method. 64 Human Nature: Natural Law, Equality, and Sociability . 67 Government. 70 Law. 73 Public and Private and the Law. 75 Conclusion. 77 Key Terms. 79
Notes. 80 Additional Readings. 82 5. Augustine: Living Together 83 Introduction.83 Augustine’s Method. 88 Human Nature. 91 Government.96 Law.102 Conclusion. 103 Key Terms. 105 Notes. 106 Additional Readings. 108 6. Aquinas: Reconciling Human and Divine 109 Introduction. 109 Aquinas’s Method. Ill Human Nature.115 Society and the Church. 117 Government. 122
Law. 127 Conclusion. 132 Key Terms. 133 Notes.134 Additional Readings. 135
Contents ix 7. Luther and Calvin: Reconfiguring Authority 137 Introduction.137 Lives and Works. 140 Methods. 142 Human Nature. 144 Law. 148 Society and Religion. 152 Government.154 Economics. 161 Women and the Family. 162 Conclusion . 165 Key Terms. 167 Notes. 167 Additional Readings. 169 8. Machiavelli: Theorizing Power 171 Introduction.171 Machiavelli’s Reputation and Major Works. 174 Machiavelli’s Method: Political Realism or Moral Cynicism?. 176 Human
Nature. 178 Power. 180 The Players: Princes, Nobles, and the People. 182 Fortune and Virtue. 184 Machiavelli’s Complicated Gender Politics. 185 Liberty and War. 187 Forms of Government. 188 Conclusion. 193 Key Terms. 195 Notes. 195 Additional Readings. 197 9. Christine de Pizan: Difference and Equality 198 Introduction. 198 Christine’s Method. 201 The Mirror for Princes. 204 Human Nature. 207 Power and Authority. 209 Conclusion. 212 Key
Terms. 213 Notes. 214 Additional Readings. 215
x Contents 10. Hobbes: Keeping Promises, Keeping Order 217 Introduction. 217 Hobbes’s Method. 221 Human Nature. 223 State of Nature. 224 Basis of Government and Political Obligation. 226 The Sovereign. 228 Natural and Civil Law. 230 Liberty. 231 Citizenship, Gender, and Subordination. 232 Forms of Government. 235 Conclusion. 236 Key Terms. 237 Notes. 237 Additional Readings. 239 11. al-Fārābī: Philosophy of Society 240 Introduction. 240 The Second Master. 241 Method. 245
Human Nature. 247 Philosophy of Society. 252 Enduring Influence. 255 Key Terms. 256 Notes. 256 Additional Readings.257 12. Locke: The Social Contract and Its Limits 258 Introduction. 258 Locke’s Method. 261 Human Nature. 262 The State of Nature. 264 State of War.270 Basis of Government. 271 Religious Toleration. 272 Equality, Subordination, andCitizenship. 275 Institutions and Forms of Government. 279 Despotism and Revolution. 280 Conclusion. 282 Key
Terms. 284 Notes. 284 Additional Readings. 286
Contents xi 13. Rousseau: Making the Good Citizen 287 Introduction.287 Rousseau’s Method. 289 State of Nature and Human Nature. 290 The Path to Liberation. 296 The Social Contract. 297 Citizenship, Gender, and Education. 304 Necessary Conditions for Securing a Contract. 309 Executive Institutions. 311 Forms of Government. 312 Conclusion.314 Key Terms. 316 Notes. 316 Additional Readings. 318 14. Mary Wollstonecraft: Turning Toward Equality 319 Introduction.319 The Social Contract and the Sexual Contract. 322 Wollstonecraft’s Method.325 Human Nature. 327 Gender Relations and Power
Dynamics . 330 The Liberation of Women. 332 Civil Society. 335 Conclusion .337 Key Terms. 339 Notes. 339 Additional Readings. 340 15. Burke: Change and Tradition 341 Introduction.341 Burke’s Method. 344 Human Nature. 346 Society. 349 Government.354 Regime Types. 357 Economics. 360 Conclusion.361 Key Terms. 363 Notes. 363 Additional
Readings. 365
xii Contents 16. Mill and Taylor Mill: Advancing Liberty 366 Introduction. 366 Utilitarianism. 369 Mill’s Revision of Utilitarianism. 373 Human Nature. 376 Equality and Difference:Gender, Class, and Colonialism . . 378 Tyranny of the Majority.383 Liberty. 385 Truth. 388 Government. 389 Political Economy. 393 Conclusion. 394 Key Terms. 395 Notes.396 Additional Readings. 397 17. Marx: Class Conflict, History, and Political Economy 399 Introduction. 399 Marx’s Critique. 402 Method: From Hegel to
Marx. 406 Stages of History. 408 Poverty, Alienation, Exploitation. 413 Scientific Socialism.417 Gender Relations and the Family. 418 The Future. 420 Conclusion. 423 Key Terms.425 Notes. 426 Additional Readings. 428 18. Friedrich Nietzsche and Sigmund Freud: Critical Perspectives 429 Introduction.429 Friedrich Nietzsche. 431 Sigmund Freud. 434 New Theories. 438 Liberatory Theory. 442 Conclusion. 444 Key Terms. 446
Notes. 447 Additional Readings. 448
Contents xiii 19. Political Thought in the Twentieth Century: Liberalism and Its Critics 450 Introduction.450 Liberalism: A Big Tent. 451 Rawls and Public Reason Liberalism. 458 Critics and Countercurrents. 462 Liberal Feminism and The Sexual Contract. 467 Twentieth-Century Voices. 471 Conclusion.475 Key Terms. 476 Notes. 477 Additional Readings. 479 20. Political Thought in the 21st Century 480 Introduction.480 Current Trends: Subject Matter. 481 Current Trends: Methods and Approaches. 485 Dominant Schools of Thought: Civic Republicanism and Democratic Theory. 488 Recent Developments in Established Specializations . 494 Emerging Specializations and Future Directions.502 Conclusion. 506 Key
Terms. 506 Notes. 507 Additional Readings. 510 Glossary 511 Index 532 |
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spelling | Tannenbaum, D. Leb 1948- Verfasser (DE-588)1230002693 aut Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought Donald G. Tannenbaum with Briana L. McGinnis Fourth edition Boston, MA Cengage [2024] Seiten illustrations 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Previous edition: published as by Donald Tannenbaum. Australia: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2012 Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd rswk-swf Political science / History Political science / Philosophy / History Political science Political science / Philosophy History Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 s DE-604 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034169107&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Tannenbaum, D. Leb 1948- Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd |
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title | Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought |
title_auth | Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought |
title_exact_search | Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought |
title_exact_search_txtP | Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought |
title_full | Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought Donald G. Tannenbaum with Briana L. McGinnis |
title_fullStr | Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought Donald G. Tannenbaum with Briana L. McGinnis |
title_full_unstemmed | Inventors of ideas introduction to political thought Donald G. Tannenbaum with Briana L. McGinnis |
title_short | Inventors of ideas |
title_sort | inventors of ideas introduction to political thought |
title_sub | introduction to political thought |
topic | Politische Philosophie (DE-588)4076226-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Politische Philosophie |
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