Freedom from fear: an incomplete history of liberalism
"A new history of liberalism which argues that liberalism has been predicated on definite morality and should be viewed as an attempt to encompass both fear and hope. Liberalism, argues Alan Kahan, is the search for a society in which people need not be afraid. Freedom from fear is the most bas...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Princeton ; Oxford
Princeton University Press
[2023]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "A new history of liberalism which argues that liberalism has been predicated on definite morality and should be viewed as an attempt to encompass both fear and hope. Liberalism, argues Alan Kahan, is the search for a society in which people need not be afraid. Freedom from fear is the most basic freedom. If we are afraid, we are not free. These insights, found in Montesquieu and Judith Shklar, are the foundation of liberalism. What liberals fear has changed over time (revolution, reaction, totalitarianism, religious fanaticism, poverty, and now populism) but the great majority of liberal thinkers have relied on three pillars to ward off their fears and to limit the concentrated power that causes fear: freedom, markets, and morals, or, to put it another way, politics, economics, and religion or morality. Most liberal thinkers emphasize one or two pillars more than another, but it is typical of liberalism down to the Second World War to rely on all three, although there were always minority voices who preferred to stand on only one leg. After WWII, "thin" procedural/market liberals, who wanted to strip any moral or religious basis or purpose from liberalism, dominated "thick" liberal moralists, who thought liberalism needed a moral basis and/or goal. It is the political contention of this book that liberalism is most convincing as program, language, and social analysis when it relies on all three pillars, and that the relative weakness of liberalism at the end of the twentieth century had much to do with neglect of the moral pillar of liberalism. Its historical contention is that for much of the past two centuries it did rely on all three pillars. But Kahan also argues that liberalism is not only a party of fear. It is also a party of hope, or the party of progress. Many of the contradictions typical of liberalism derive from the seemingly contradictory effort to encompass both hope and fear. If in case of conflict fear often trumps hope for liberals (loss aversion applies in politics as much as in economics), and utopia is subject to indefinite postponement, progress in personal autonomy and development has always been at the heart of liberalism. Liberals typically support their hopes on the same three pillars of freedom, markets, and morals which they use to ward off their fears. Nevertheless, in one respect those historians and political theorists who identify liberalism with laissez-faire economics are not wrong. It is characteristic of liberalism then that it bases its hopes not on the state but on civil society, which for liberals is the common source of a free politics, a free market, and of morals. Alan S. Kahan is Professor of History at the Université de Versailles. |
Beschreibung: | xi, 509 Seiten Illustrationen 24,3 cm |
ISBN: | 9780691191287 |
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505 | 8 | |a Part 1. Prologue -- Part 2. The All-Too-Short Nineteenth Century -- Part 3. New Fears, New Hopes | |
520 | 3 | |a "A new history of liberalism which argues that liberalism has been predicated on definite morality and should be viewed as an attempt to encompass both fear and hope. Liberalism, argues Alan Kahan, is the search for a society in which people need not be afraid. Freedom from fear is the most basic freedom. If we are afraid, we are not free. These insights, found in Montesquieu and Judith Shklar, are the foundation of liberalism. What liberals fear has changed over time (revolution, reaction, totalitarianism, religious fanaticism, poverty, and now populism) but the great majority of liberal thinkers have relied on three pillars to ward off their fears and to limit the concentrated power that causes fear: freedom, markets, and morals, or, to put it another way, politics, economics, and religion or morality. | |
520 | 3 | |a Most liberal thinkers emphasize one or two pillars more than another, but it is typical of liberalism down to the Second World War to rely on all three, although there were always minority voices who preferred to stand on only one leg. After WWII, "thin" procedural/market liberals, who wanted to strip any moral or religious basis or purpose from liberalism, dominated "thick" liberal moralists, who thought liberalism needed a moral basis and/or goal. It is the political contention of this book that liberalism is most convincing as program, language, and social analysis when it relies on all three pillars, and that the relative weakness of liberalism at the end of the twentieth century had much to do with neglect of the moral pillar of liberalism. Its historical contention is that for much of the past two centuries it did rely on all three pillars. But Kahan also argues that liberalism is not only a party of fear. It is also a party of hope, or the party of progress. | |
520 | 3 | |a Many of the contradictions typical of liberalism derive from the seemingly contradictory effort to encompass both hope and fear. If in case of conflict fear often trumps hope for liberals (loss aversion applies in politics as much as in economics), and utopia is subject to indefinite postponement, progress in personal autonomy and development has always been at the heart of liberalism. Liberals typically support their hopes on the same three pillars of freedom, markets, and morals which they use to ward off their fears. Nevertheless, in one respect those historians and political theorists who identify liberalism with laissez-faire economics are not wrong. It is characteristic of liberalism then that it bases its hopes not on the state but on civil society, which for liberals is the common source of a free politics, a free market, and of morals. Alan S. Kahan is Professor of History at the Université de Versailles. | |
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CONTENTS Acknowledgments xi 1 PART l: PROLOGUE 1 2 Liberalism 3 The Four Fears ofLiberalism 3 The Three Pillars ofLiberalism 13 Hope versus Fear 17 Should We Start at the Very Beginning? Or, Why Not Locke? 23 Liberals and Liberalisms 29 Before the Revolutions 36 Moderating the Modern State: Montesquieu 38 History and Human Nature: Adam Smith 53 Proto-Liberalism and Republicanism 69 PART II: THE ALL-TOO-SHORT NINETEENTH CENTURY 3 75 After the Revolutions 77 Immanuel Kant: Liberalism and Critical Thinking 78 James Madison: Liberalism for a New World 88 Constant: Squaring the Circle between Ancient and Modern Freedom 97 4 Many-Splendored Liberalism Macaulay: Faith in Progress and the Middle Classes 111 112 Tocqueville: The Inventor ofLiberal Democracy? 124 John Stuart Mill: A World Safe for Struggle 137
viii 5 CONTENTS Liberalism on the Front Lines: Freedom, Nation, God 153 The Discourse of Capacity: Liberalism and Suffrage in Europe 154 Nationalism 165 Like Oil and Water? Liberalism and Catholicism 181 6 Liberalisms with Something Missing 199 Bentham: Liberalism on the Basis of Happiness 202 Bastiat: Producers versus Plunderers 211 Spencer and Evolution: For Better or Worse 220 PART III: NEW FEARS, NEW HOPES 7 Modern Liberalism versus Classical Liberalism 237 239 Liberalism in the Fin de Siècle, 1873-1919 239 Jane Addams and Progressivism 253 Solidarity Forever: Léon Bourgeois 260 Hobhouse and Liberal Socialism 263 Dicey’s Despair: The Rise of Collectivism 271 8 Liberalisms Limits 280 Liberalism, Nationalism, and the Jewish Problem in Fin de Siècle Germany 282 Liberalism and Colonialism 291 Colonialism and Modern Liberalism: The Case ofFriedrich Naumann 302 Liberalism and Feminism in the Nineteenth Century and the Fin de Siècle 3°7 Before the Deluge 323 9 A World in Crisis and the Crisis of Liberalism, 1919-1945 326 Walter Lippmann and His Conference 3^9 The Hayek Equation: Freedom = Ignorance Properly Understood 337 Isaiah Berlin 34$ Ordoliberalism 3 h
IX CONTENTS io 11 Hollow Victories, 1945-2000 372 The End ofIdeology Movement 376 Egalitarian Liberalism: Rawls 385 Libertarianism: Nozick 394 Neoliberalism and Milton Friedman 399 Liberal Fear and Liberal Realism: Shklar and Williams 406 Liberalism and Populism: The Search for a Solution 416 Defining Populism 416 Understanding the Rise ofPopulism 421 Liberal Responses to the Problem ofPopulism 433 Toward Liberalism 4.0 443 451 Appendix Works Cited Index 453 477 |
adam_txt |
CONTENTS Acknowledgments xi 1 PART l: PROLOGUE 1 2 Liberalism 3 The Four Fears ofLiberalism 3 The Three Pillars ofLiberalism 13 Hope versus Fear 17 Should We Start at the Very Beginning? Or, Why Not Locke? 23 Liberals and Liberalisms 29 Before the Revolutions 36 Moderating the Modern State: Montesquieu 38 History and Human Nature: Adam Smith 53 Proto-Liberalism and Republicanism 69 PART II: THE ALL-TOO-SHORT NINETEENTH CENTURY 3 75 After the Revolutions 77 Immanuel Kant: Liberalism and Critical Thinking 78 James Madison: Liberalism for a New World 88 Constant: Squaring the Circle between Ancient and Modern Freedom 97 4 Many-Splendored Liberalism Macaulay: Faith in Progress and the Middle Classes 111 112 Tocqueville: The Inventor ofLiberal Democracy? 124 John Stuart Mill: A World Safe for Struggle 137
viii 5 CONTENTS Liberalism on the Front Lines: Freedom, Nation, God 153 The Discourse of Capacity: Liberalism and Suffrage in Europe 154 Nationalism 165 Like Oil and Water? Liberalism and Catholicism 181 6 Liberalisms with Something Missing 199 Bentham: Liberalism on the Basis of Happiness 202 Bastiat: Producers versus Plunderers 211 Spencer and Evolution: For Better or Worse 220 PART III: NEW FEARS, NEW HOPES 7 Modern Liberalism versus Classical Liberalism 237 239 Liberalism in the Fin de Siècle, 1873-1919 239 Jane Addams and Progressivism 253 Solidarity Forever: Léon Bourgeois 260 Hobhouse and Liberal Socialism 263 Dicey’s Despair: The Rise of Collectivism 271 8 Liberalisms Limits 280 Liberalism, Nationalism, and the Jewish Problem in Fin de Siècle Germany 282 Liberalism and Colonialism 291 Colonialism and Modern Liberalism: The Case ofFriedrich Naumann 302 Liberalism and Feminism in the Nineteenth Century and the Fin de Siècle 3°7 Before the Deluge 323 9 A World in Crisis and the Crisis of Liberalism, 1919-1945 326 Walter Lippmann and His Conference 3^9 The Hayek Equation: Freedom = Ignorance Properly Understood 337 Isaiah Berlin 34$ Ordoliberalism 3 h
IX CONTENTS io 11 Hollow Victories, 1945-2000 372 The End ofIdeology Movement 376 Egalitarian Liberalism: Rawls 385 Libertarianism: Nozick 394 Neoliberalism and Milton Friedman 399 Liberal Fear and Liberal Realism: Shklar and Williams 406 Liberalism and Populism: The Search for a Solution 416 Defining Populism 416 Understanding the Rise ofPopulism 421 Liberal Responses to the Problem ofPopulism 433 Toward Liberalism 4.0 443 451 Appendix Works Cited Index 453 477 |
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author | Kahan, Alan S. 1959- |
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contents | Part 1. Prologue -- Part 2. The All-Too-Short Nineteenth Century -- Part 3. New Fears, New Hopes |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1381951840 (DE-599)BVBBV049391148 |
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publisher | Princeton University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Kahan, Alan S. 1959- Verfasser (DE-588)142625337 aut Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism Alan S. Kahan Incomplete history of liberalism Princeton ; Oxford Princeton University Press [2023] © 2023 xi, 509 Seiten Illustrationen 24,3 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Part 1. Prologue -- Part 2. The All-Too-Short Nineteenth Century -- Part 3. New Fears, New Hopes "A new history of liberalism which argues that liberalism has been predicated on definite morality and should be viewed as an attempt to encompass both fear and hope. Liberalism, argues Alan Kahan, is the search for a society in which people need not be afraid. Freedom from fear is the most basic freedom. If we are afraid, we are not free. These insights, found in Montesquieu and Judith Shklar, are the foundation of liberalism. What liberals fear has changed over time (revolution, reaction, totalitarianism, religious fanaticism, poverty, and now populism) but the great majority of liberal thinkers have relied on three pillars to ward off their fears and to limit the concentrated power that causes fear: freedom, markets, and morals, or, to put it another way, politics, economics, and religion or morality. Most liberal thinkers emphasize one or two pillars more than another, but it is typical of liberalism down to the Second World War to rely on all three, although there were always minority voices who preferred to stand on only one leg. After WWII, "thin" procedural/market liberals, who wanted to strip any moral or religious basis or purpose from liberalism, dominated "thick" liberal moralists, who thought liberalism needed a moral basis and/or goal. It is the political contention of this book that liberalism is most convincing as program, language, and social analysis when it relies on all three pillars, and that the relative weakness of liberalism at the end of the twentieth century had much to do with neglect of the moral pillar of liberalism. Its historical contention is that for much of the past two centuries it did rely on all three pillars. But Kahan also argues that liberalism is not only a party of fear. It is also a party of hope, or the party of progress. Many of the contradictions typical of liberalism derive from the seemingly contradictory effort to encompass both hope and fear. If in case of conflict fear often trumps hope for liberals (loss aversion applies in politics as much as in economics), and utopia is subject to indefinite postponement, progress in personal autonomy and development has always been at the heart of liberalism. Liberals typically support their hopes on the same three pillars of freedom, markets, and morals which they use to ward off their fears. Nevertheless, in one respect those historians and political theorists who identify liberalism with laissez-faire economics are not wrong. It is characteristic of liberalism then that it bases its hopes not on the state but on civil society, which for liberals is the common source of a free politics, a free market, and of morals. Alan S. Kahan is Professor of History at the Université de Versailles. Ideengeschichte gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 1550-2020 gnd rswk-swf Liberalismus (DE-588)4035582-2 gnd rswk-swf Liberalism / History State, The POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Conservatism & Liberalism PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy Liberalism History Liberalismus (DE-588)4035582-2 s Geschichte 1550-2020 z DE-604 Ideengeschichte z Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 9780691250687 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=034718562&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Kahan, Alan S. 1959- Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism Part 1. Prologue -- Part 2. The All-Too-Short Nineteenth Century -- Part 3. New Fears, New Hopes Liberalismus (DE-588)4035582-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4035582-2 |
title | Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism |
title_alt | Incomplete history of liberalism |
title_auth | Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism |
title_exact_search | Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism |
title_exact_search_txtP | Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism |
title_full | Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism Alan S. Kahan |
title_fullStr | Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism Alan S. Kahan |
title_full_unstemmed | Freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism Alan S. Kahan |
title_short | Freedom from fear |
title_sort | freedom from fear an incomplete history of liberalism |
title_sub | an incomplete history of liberalism |
topic | Liberalismus (DE-588)4035582-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Liberalismus |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034718562&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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