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Politics and the Search for the Common Good

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Rethinking politics in a new vocabulary, Hans Sluga challenges the firmly held assumption that there exists a single common good which politics is meant to realize.

He argues that politics is not a natural but a historical phenomenon, and not a single thing but a multiplicity of political forms and values only loosely related.

He contrasts two traditions in political philosophy: a 'normative theorizing' that extends from Plato to John Rawls and a newer 'diagnostic practice' that emerged with Marx and Nietzsche and has found its three most prominent twentieth-century practitioners in Carl Schmitt, Hannah Arendt, and Michel Foucault.

He then examines the sources of diagnostic political thinking, analyzes its achievements, and offers a critical assessment of its limitations.

His important book will be of interest to a wide range of upper-level students and scholars in political philosophy, political theory, and the history of ideas.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107671132 / 9781107671133
Paperback / softback
320.01
23/10/2014
United Kingdom
English
240 pages : illustrations (black and white)