Now available on Christopher F. Zurn's website:
A draft of an encyclopedia article for "History of Continental Thought, Volume 6: Poststructuralism and Critical Theory's Second Generation", ed. Alan D. Schrift (Acumen Press)
"Jürgen Habermas" [pdf, draft]
Christopher F. Zurn is Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts, Boston. He is the author of "Deliberative Democracy and the Institutions of Judicial Review" (Cambridge University Press, 2007) and co-editor of "Anerkennung" (Akademie Verlag, 2009).
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
Habermas and Nida-Rümelin: Protect the philosophers in Hungary
In an article in "Süddeutsche Zeitung" (January 25, 2011), Jürgen Habermas and Julian Nida-Rüdelin express their concerns about the situation in Hungary for Agnes Heller, Mihály Vajda and Sándor Radnóti. They have been accused of misusing public funds.
"Schützt die Philosophen!"
See also professor Laszlo Tengelyi's open letter on the situation of philosophers in Hungary.
Update:
See an English translation here:
"Protect the Philosophers!"
Excerpt:
"Given this, we call on the European Commission not only to subject the Hungarian media law to a long-overdue legal assessment, but that, at the same time, in the course of this assessment, it ought also to take into account the general practices of the Hungarian regime and its agents, and in this case especially it ought to examine the treatment of critical academics and intellectuals. In the question of whether, in a country that today represents the European Union, essential principles of a liberal constitutional order may be injured, the European parliament abstains from giving an answer; the Council of the European Union is, as usual, divided; and the German federal government makes merely tight-lipped statements."
And a French translation here:
"Sauvons les philosophes!"
"Schützt die Philosophen!"
See also professor Laszlo Tengelyi's open letter on the situation of philosophers in Hungary.
Update:
See an English translation here:
"Protect the Philosophers!"
Excerpt:
"Given this, we call on the European Commission not only to subject the Hungarian media law to a long-overdue legal assessment, but that, at the same time, in the course of this assessment, it ought also to take into account the general practices of the Hungarian regime and its agents, and in this case especially it ought to examine the treatment of critical academics and intellectuals. In the question of whether, in a country that today represents the European Union, essential principles of a liberal constitutional order may be injured, the European parliament abstains from giving an answer; the Council of the European Union is, as usual, divided; and the German federal government makes merely tight-lipped statements."
And a French translation here:
"Sauvons les philosophes!"
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Interview: Michael Sandel on Justice
In the British monthly "Prospect" (January 21, 2011), Nigel Warburton interviews Professor Michael Sandel (Harvard):
"Interview: Michael Sandel on Justice"
Excerpt:
"I do think that Kant has a powerful argument against the utilitarian way of thinking about morality and justice. The hard question arises when it comes to identifying what universal rights we have and what it means to respect them. Kant thought the reason duties and rights are categorical and universal is that we can arrive at them by abstracting from all of our particular interests, values, ends and purposes in life. That is, if we subtract all the differences between our interests, values and so on, what we’re left with are those interests, values etc that we all share. That’s what makes them universal: we arrive at them regardless of who in particular we are.
But that way of defining and deriving rights comes at a cost. It requires us for purposes of justice to abstract altogether from the particular conceptions of the good life that we have."
Michael Sandel is Professor of Government at Harvard University. His latest book is "Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do?" (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2009).
See some of my previous posts on Michael Sandel here, here & here.
Beginning in January 2011, BBC4 TV is hosting a debate on the state of justice in Britain and the world today - "Justice: A Citizen's Guide" - including lectures by Michael Sandel.
"Interview: Michael Sandel on Justice"
Excerpt:
"I do think that Kant has a powerful argument against the utilitarian way of thinking about morality and justice. The hard question arises when it comes to identifying what universal rights we have and what it means to respect them. Kant thought the reason duties and rights are categorical and universal is that we can arrive at them by abstracting from all of our particular interests, values, ends and purposes in life. That is, if we subtract all the differences between our interests, values and so on, what we’re left with are those interests, values etc that we all share. That’s what makes them universal: we arrive at them regardless of who in particular we are.
But that way of defining and deriving rights comes at a cost. It requires us for purposes of justice to abstract altogether from the particular conceptions of the good life that we have."
Michael Sandel is Professor of Government at Harvard University. His latest book is "Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do?" (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2009).
See some of my previous posts on Michael Sandel here, here & here.
Beginning in January 2011, BBC4 TV is hosting a debate on the state of justice in Britain and the world today - "Justice: A Citizen's Guide" - including lectures by Michael Sandel.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
A new collection of essays by Joshua Cohen
The Arc of the Moral Universe
and Other Essays
by Joshua Cohen
(Harvard University Press, 2011)
426 pages
Description
In this collection of essays, Joshua Cohen locates ideas about democracy in three far-ranging contexts. First, he explores the relationship between democratic values and history. He then discusses democracy in connection with the views of defining political theorists in the democratic tradition: John Locke, John Rawls, Noam Chomsky, Jürgen Habermas, and Susan Moller Okin. Finally, he examines the place of democratic ideals in a global setting, suggesting an idea of “global public reason”—a terrain of political justification in global politics in which shared reason still plays an essential role.
All the essays are linked by his overarching claim that political philosophy is a practical subject intended to orient and guide conduct in the social world. Cohen integrates moral, social-scientific, and historical argument in order to develop this stance, and he further confronts the question of whether a society conceived in liberty and dedicated to equality can endure.
Contents
Introduction [preview]
Part I. Justice in History
1. The Arc of the Moral Universe [preview] (1997)
Part II. Reflections on the Democratic Tradition
2. Structure, Choice, and Legitimacy: Locke's Theory of the State (1986)
3. Democratic Equality (1989)
4. A More Democratic Liberalism (1994)
5. For a Democratic Society (2003)
6. Knowledge, Morality and Hope: the Social Thought of Noam Chomsky (1991)
7. Reflections on Habermas on Democracy [preview] (1999)
8. A Matter of Demolition? Susan Okin on Justice and Gender (2009)
Part III. Global Justice
9. Minimalism about Human Rights: the Most We Can Hope For? (2004)
10. Is There a Human Right to Democracy? [pdf] (2006)
11. Extra Republicam Nulla Justitia? [pdf] (2006)
Joshua Cohen is Professor of Ethics in Society at Stanford University. He is editor of Boston Review. His books include "Philosophy, Politics, Democracy: Selected Papers" (Harvard University Press, 2009) and “Rousseau: A Free Community of Equals” (Oxford University Press, 2010).
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Dworkin sharply criticises Amartya Sen's book on justice
In his new book "Justice for Hedgehogs", Ronald Dworkin sharply criticises Amartya Sen's book on justice.
Dworkin writes:
"Sen's own work in developmental economics has been enormously important and useful. His views on the causes of famine has been particularly influential. He has brought a wealth of Eastern, particularly Indian, history, literature, and philosophy to the attention of Western readers; his latest book is particularly rich in such information. However, The Idea of Justice does not support Sen's claim of a departure in normative political philosophy: in fact he offers less help in real-world judgment than do the theories he means to depart from. His comments on particular political issues are either uncontroversial - he condemns slavery - or noncommittal. He appeals to a variety of standards for comparative judgment of existing structures, but at far too abstract a level to be useful in comparative judgment. He endorses the spirit of Adam Smith's "impartial observer" test, which recommends the decisions that an ideal and impartial judge would reach. But that test, unless construed in a utilitarian way, lacks bite: it does not tell us what theory a beneficent spectator would deploy to decide issues now controversial. Sen says that policy should focus (though not exclusively) on promoting equality in what he calls "capabilities".... But he concedes the wide variations in people's rankings of the importance of these capabilities and does not recommend any way of choosing among the rankings in the face of serious disagreement. He believes that free democratic discussion among ideally public-spirited citizens would be helpful to comparative judgment. He does not say how this thought is helpful in real communities that include a great many followers of, say, Sarah Palin. It is not helpful, in the world of real politics, only to call for due consideration of a large variety of factors that everyone concedes relevant without also offering some overall scheme to suggest how these different factors should be weighted in a practical decision about a controversial issue." (p. 577).
See also Sen's critique of Dworkin in "The Idea of Justice" (Harvard University Press, 2009) pp. 264-68. Sen here informs us that he and Dworkin jointly taught classes for ten years at Oxford University.
See my previous post on Ronald Dworkin's new book here.
Dworkin writes:
"Sen's own work in developmental economics has been enormously important and useful. His views on the causes of famine has been particularly influential. He has brought a wealth of Eastern, particularly Indian, history, literature, and philosophy to the attention of Western readers; his latest book is particularly rich in such information. However, The Idea of Justice does not support Sen's claim of a departure in normative political philosophy: in fact he offers less help in real-world judgment than do the theories he means to depart from. His comments on particular political issues are either uncontroversial - he condemns slavery - or noncommittal. He appeals to a variety of standards for comparative judgment of existing structures, but at far too abstract a level to be useful in comparative judgment. He endorses the spirit of Adam Smith's "impartial observer" test, which recommends the decisions that an ideal and impartial judge would reach. But that test, unless construed in a utilitarian way, lacks bite: it does not tell us what theory a beneficent spectator would deploy to decide issues now controversial. Sen says that policy should focus (though not exclusively) on promoting equality in what he calls "capabilities".... But he concedes the wide variations in people's rankings of the importance of these capabilities and does not recommend any way of choosing among the rankings in the face of serious disagreement. He believes that free democratic discussion among ideally public-spirited citizens would be helpful to comparative judgment. He does not say how this thought is helpful in real communities that include a great many followers of, say, Sarah Palin. It is not helpful, in the world of real politics, only to call for due consideration of a large variety of factors that everyone concedes relevant without also offering some overall scheme to suggest how these different factors should be weighted in a practical decision about a controversial issue." (p. 577).
See also Sen's critique of Dworkin in "The Idea of Justice" (Harvard University Press, 2009) pp. 264-68. Sen here informs us that he and Dworkin jointly taught classes for ten years at Oxford University.
See my previous post on Ronald Dworkin's new book here.
Friday, January 14, 2011
Habermas in a debate on the role of German diplomats in the Third Reich
On January 12, 2011, Jürgen Habermas participated in a discussion in München on the book "Das Amt und die Vergangenheit. Deutsche Diplomaten im Dritten Reich und in der Bundesrepublik" by Eckart Conze, Norbert Frei, Peter Hayes, & Moshe Zimmermann (Karl Blessing Verlag, 2010). The discussion took place at "Katholische Akademie in Bayern".
Read the report on the discussion in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, January 14, 2011: "Wie einmal sogar Habermas überrascht war".
Read the report on the discussion in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, January 14, 2011: "Wie einmal sogar Habermas überrascht war".
Thursday, January 13, 2011
New book: The Order of Public Reason
The Order of Public Reason
A Theory of Freedom and Morality in a Diverse and Bounded World
by Gerald Gaus
(Cambridge University Press, January 2011)
598 pages
Description
Gerald Gaus shows how we can achieve a moral and political order that treats all as free and equal moral persons. The first part of this work analyses social morality as a system of authoritative moral rules. Drawing on an earlier generation of moral philosophers such as Kurt Baier and Peter Strawson as well as current work in the social sciences, Gaus argues that our social morality is an evolved social fact, which is the necessary foundation of a mutually beneficial social order. The second part considers how this system of social moral authority can be justified to all moral persons. Drawing on the tools of game theory, social choice theory, experimental psychology, and evolutionary theory, Gaus shows how a free society can secure a moral equilibrium that is endorsed by all, and how a just state respects, and develops, such an equilibrium.
Contents
1. The Fundamental Problem [pdf]
Part I. Social Order and Social Morality
2. The Failure of Instrumentalism
3. Social Morality as the Sphere of Rules
4. Emotion and Reason in Social Morality
Part II. Real Public Reason
5. The Justificatory Problem and the Deliberative Model
6. The Rights of the Moderns
7. Moral Equilibrium and Moral Freedom
8. The Moral and Political Orders
Gerald Gaus is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona. He is the author of "Contemporary Theories of Liberalism: Public Reason as a Post-Enlightenment Project" (Sage, 2003).
Follow the reading group on Gaus's book at the blog "Public Reason: A Blog for Political Philosophers".
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Review of Matthew Specter's book on Habermas
In "The New Republic", Professor Peter Gordon (Harvard) reviews Matthew Specter's "Habermas, An Intellectual Biography" (Cambridge University Press, 2010):
Up from Zero Hour
Excerpt:
"Specter is especially good at discerning how even the more technical facets of Habermas’s thinking took shape in critical dialogue with contemporary political events. This is true most of all for Specter’s account of the genesis of Habermas’s most recent contribution to political and legal theory, Between Facts and Norms, published in Germany in 1992, the work to which Specter devotes deepest attention in his book’s closing chapter, almost as if it were the culmination of Habermas’s career. One of Specter’s major aims is to push back against critics (such as the left-Schmittian Chantal Mouffe) who have read Between Facts and Norms as Habermas’s farewell to his earlier mode of Marxist-inspired critical theory and, more dramatically, as a capitulation to neo-liberalism. More moderate readers have seen the book as setting out on a new path, marking a “legal turn” or “liberal turn” in Habermas’s thought.
Specter, rather boldly, rejects all these interpretations. He insists instead that the work should be read as “a kind of fragmented intellectual biography,” such that we may better discern development where others have identified a volte face. “The thesis of a legal or liberal turn,” Specter claims, “obscures a significant continuity in Habermas’s work” that stretches all the way back to his thesis, in 1962, on the genesis of the bourgeois public sphere. It springs from “Habermas’s lifelong commitment to a radical reform of liberal constitutionalism.”
Peter Gordon is Professor of History at Harvard University.
See my post on Matthew Specter's book here.
(Thanks to Raphael Neves for the pointer!)
Update:
See Brian Leiter's post on Peter Gondon's review at "Leiter Reports" and the comments on Leiter's post.
Up from Zero Hour
Excerpt:
"Specter is especially good at discerning how even the more technical facets of Habermas’s thinking took shape in critical dialogue with contemporary political events. This is true most of all for Specter’s account of the genesis of Habermas’s most recent contribution to political and legal theory, Between Facts and Norms, published in Germany in 1992, the work to which Specter devotes deepest attention in his book’s closing chapter, almost as if it were the culmination of Habermas’s career. One of Specter’s major aims is to push back against critics (such as the left-Schmittian Chantal Mouffe) who have read Between Facts and Norms as Habermas’s farewell to his earlier mode of Marxist-inspired critical theory and, more dramatically, as a capitulation to neo-liberalism. More moderate readers have seen the book as setting out on a new path, marking a “legal turn” or “liberal turn” in Habermas’s thought.
Specter, rather boldly, rejects all these interpretations. He insists instead that the work should be read as “a kind of fragmented intellectual biography,” such that we may better discern development where others have identified a volte face. “The thesis of a legal or liberal turn,” Specter claims, “obscures a significant continuity in Habermas’s work” that stretches all the way back to his thesis, in 1962, on the genesis of the bourgeois public sphere. It springs from “Habermas’s lifelong commitment to a radical reform of liberal constitutionalism.”
Peter Gordon is Professor of History at Harvard University.
See my post on Matthew Specter's book here.
(Thanks to Raphael Neves for the pointer!)
Update:
See Brian Leiter's post on Peter Gondon's review at "Leiter Reports" and the comments on Leiter's post.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Thomas Christiano on the Legitimacy of International Institutions (video)
Video with lecture by Thomas Christiano:
Is Democratic Legitimacy Possible for International Institutions? (mp4)
The lecture was given at the Osgood Hall Law School, York University, on October 22, 2010.
See his paper here (pdf)
The paper will be published in "International Democracy: Normative and Empirical Perspectives" ed. by Daniele Archibugi & Mathias Koenig-Archibugi (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2011).
Thomas Christiano is Professor of Law and Philosophy at the University of Arizona. He is the author of "The Rule of The Many: Fundamental Issues in Democratic Theory" (Westview Press, 1996) and "The Constitution of Equality: Democratic Authority and Its Limits" (Oxford University Press, 2008).
Is Democratic Legitimacy Possible for International Institutions? (mp4)
The lecture was given at the Osgood Hall Law School, York University, on October 22, 2010.
See his paper here (pdf)
The paper will be published in "International Democracy: Normative and Empirical Perspectives" ed. by Daniele Archibugi & Mathias Koenig-Archibugi (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2011).
Thomas Christiano is Professor of Law and Philosophy at the University of Arizona. He is the author of "The Rule of The Many: Fundamental Issues in Democratic Theory" (Westview Press, 1996) and "The Constitution of Equality: Democratic Authority and Its Limits" (Oxford University Press, 2008).
Review of Honneth's book on Hegel
Review of Axel Honneth's "The Pathologies of Individual Freedom: Hegel’s Social Theory" (Princeton University Press, 2010):
Review: The Pathologies of Individual Freedom
by Alberto Toscano (University of London)
First chapter of Honneth's book is available here (pdf).
See also J. M. Bernstein's review of the book.
And my post on Honneth's book here.
Review: The Pathologies of Individual Freedom
by Alberto Toscano (University of London)
First chapter of Honneth's book is available here (pdf).
See also J. M. Bernstein's review of the book.
And my post on Honneth's book here.
Sunday, January 09, 2011
"Responsibilty for Justice" by Iris Marion Young
Responsibility for Justice
by Iris Marion Young
(Oxford University Press, December 2010)
224 pages
Description
When the noted political philosopher Iris Marion Young died in 2006, her death was mourned as the passing of "one of the most important political philosophers of the past quarter-century" (Cass Sunstein) and as an important and innovative thinker working at the conjunction of a number of important topics: global justice; democracy and difference; continental political theory; ethics and international affairs; and gender, race and public policy.
In her long-awaited "Responsibility for Justice", Young discusses our responsibilities to address "structural" injustices in which we among many are implicated (but for which we not to blame), often by virtue of participating in a market, such as buying goods produced in sweatshops, or participating in booming housing markets that leave many homeless. Young argues that addressing these structural injustices requires a new model of responsibility, which she calls the "social connection" model. She develops this idea by clarifying the nature of structural injustice; developing the notion of political responsibility for injustice and how it differs from older ideas of blame and guilt; and finally how we can then use this model to describe our responsibilities to others no matter who we are and where we live.
Contents
Foreword by Martha C. Nussbaum
1. From Personal to Political Responsibility
2. Structure as the Subject of Justice
3. Guilt versus Responsibility
4. A Social Connection Model [pdf]
5. Responsibility Across Borders
6. Avoiding Responsibility
7. Responsibility and Historic Injustice
Iris Marion Young (1949-2006) was Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago. She is the author of "Inclusion and Democracy"(Oxford University Press, 2000).
See the memorial website from Chicago Political Theory Graduate Student Caucus.
See Martha Nussbaum's personal remembraces of Iris Young.
See also my post on "Dancing with Iris: The Philosophy of Iris Marion Young" (Oxford University Press, 2009) edited by Ann Ferguson & Mechtild Nagel.
Thursday, January 06, 2011
Habermas in "Le Monde"
A French translation of Jürgen Habermas's NYT article on "Leadership and Leitkultur" (October 29, 2010) was published in "Le Monde" on January 4, 2011:
"L'Europe malade de la xénophobie"
Excerpt:
"La question est alors la suivante: la participation dans les procédures démocratiques n'a-t-elle pour signification fonctionnelle que de réduire au silence la minorité battue, ou implique-t-elle une signification délibérative qui inclut les arguments des citoyens dans le processus démocratique de formation de la volonté et de l'opinion? Les motivations qui sous-tendent chacun de ces trois phénomènes — la peur des immigrés, l'attrait pour des figures charismatiques non-politiciennes et la rébellion populaire de Stuttgart — sont différentes. Mais elles se rencontrent pour traduire cumulativement un malaise croissant face à un système politique replié sur lui-même et de plus en plus désemparé.
Plus le champ d'action des gouvernements nationaux se rétrécit, plus la politique se soumet docilement à ce qui s'impose comme des impératifs inévitables, économiques ou autres, et plus la confiance du peuple dans une classe politique résignée diminue.
Les États-Unis ont élu un président qui possède une vision politique lucide, quand bien même est-il lui aussi pris d'assaut sur tous les fronts et en butte à des sentiments de plus en plus mêlés. Ce dont nous avons besoin en Europe, c'est d'une classe politique revitalisée, qui surmonte son propre défaitisme avec un peu plus de perspectives, de résolution et d'esprit de coopération. La démocratie dépend de la capacité du peuple à croire qu'une certaine marge de manœuvre existe qui nous permette de façonner l'avenir et d'affronter tous ses défis."
(Translated by Christian Bouchindhomme)
"L'Europe malade de la xénophobie"
Excerpt:
"La question est alors la suivante: la participation dans les procédures démocratiques n'a-t-elle pour signification fonctionnelle que de réduire au silence la minorité battue, ou implique-t-elle une signification délibérative qui inclut les arguments des citoyens dans le processus démocratique de formation de la volonté et de l'opinion? Les motivations qui sous-tendent chacun de ces trois phénomènes — la peur des immigrés, l'attrait pour des figures charismatiques non-politiciennes et la rébellion populaire de Stuttgart — sont différentes. Mais elles se rencontrent pour traduire cumulativement un malaise croissant face à un système politique replié sur lui-même et de plus en plus désemparé.
Plus le champ d'action des gouvernements nationaux se rétrécit, plus la politique se soumet docilement à ce qui s'impose comme des impératifs inévitables, économiques ou autres, et plus la confiance du peuple dans une classe politique résignée diminue.
Les États-Unis ont élu un président qui possède une vision politique lucide, quand bien même est-il lui aussi pris d'assaut sur tous les fronts et en butte à des sentiments de plus en plus mêlés. Ce dont nous avons besoin en Europe, c'est d'une classe politique revitalisée, qui surmonte son propre défaitisme avec un peu plus de perspectives, de résolution et d'esprit de coopération. La démocratie dépend de la capacité du peuple à croire qu'une certaine marge de manœuvre existe qui nous permette de façonner l'avenir et d'affronter tous ses défis."
(Translated by Christian Bouchindhomme)
Tuesday, January 04, 2011
New book: Liberalism without Perfection
Liberalism without Perfection
by Jonathan Quong
(Oxford University Press, 2011)
352 pages
Description
A growing number of political philosophers favour a view called liberal perfectionism. According to this view, liberal political morality is characterised by a commitment to helping individuals lead autonomous lives and making other valuable choices. In this book Jonathan Quong rejects this widely held view and offers an alternative account of liberal political morality. Quong argues that the liberal state should not be engaged in determining what constitutes a valuable or worthwhile life nor trying to make sure that individuals live up to this ideal. Instead, it should remain neutral on the issue of the good life, and restrict itself to establishing the fair terms within which individuals can pursue their own beliefs about what gives value to their lives. The book thus defends a position known as political liberalism. The first part of the book subjects the liberal perfectionist position to critical scrutiny, advancing three major objections that raise serious doubts about the liberal perfectionist position with regard to autonomy, paternalism, and political legitimacy. The latter chapters then present and defend a distinctive version of political liberalism. In particular, Quong clarifies and develops political liberalism's central thesis: that political principles, in order to be legitimate, must be publicly justifiable to reasonable people. Drawing on the work of John Rawls, Quong offers his own interpretation of this idea, and rebuts some of the main objections that have been pressed against it. In doing so, the book offers novel arguments regarding the nature of an overlapping consensus, the structure of political justification, the idea of public reason, and the status of unreasonable persons.
Contents
Introduction [pdf]
1: What Kind of Liberalism?
2: The Argument from Autonomy
3: Paternalism and Perfectionism
4: Justification and Legitimacy
5: A Question Internal to Liberal Theory
6: The Role of an Overlapping Consensus
7: Disagreement and Asymmetry
8: Truth and Scepticism
9: The Scope and Structure of Public Reason
10: Unreasonable Citizens
Conclusion
Jonathan Quong a Senior Lecturer in Political Philosophy at the University of Manchester. During 2010-11 Quong is a Laurance S. Rockefeller Visiting Faculty Fellow at Princeton's University Center for Human Values.
See also Jonathan Quong's review essay of G.A.Cohen's "Rescuing Justice and Equality" (Harvard University Press, 2008): "Justice Beyond Equality".
Sunday, January 02, 2011
John Gray reviews Samuel Moyn's book on human rights
In "The National Interest" (January-February 2011), John Gray reviews Samuel Moyn's "The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History" (Belknap Press, 2010):
"What Rawls Hath Wrought"
Excerpts:
"Undermining the narrative of a virtually inevitable human evolution, the notion that rights are the foundation of society came only with the rise of the Harvard philosopher John Rawls’s vastly influential A Theory of Justice (1971). In the years following, it slowly came to be accepted that human rights were the bottom line in political morality. [....] The belief that rights are fundamental in political ethics is a late twentieth-century fancy. [....].... it was Rawls’s work that was chiefly responsible for the triumph of the narrow type of liberalism that has since dominated Anglo-American political philosophy. The result was to promote a type of liberal legalism in which the rule of law was simply assumed, while politics was virtually ignored.
The most damaging effect of Rawls’s work was the neglect of the state that it produced. [.....] It is partly the loss of the insight that human rights can only be secured by an effective state that explains the failure of the regime-change policies promoted by neoconservatives and liberal hawks over the past decade. If rights are what humans possess in the absence of a repressive regime, all that needs to be done to secure human rights is to remove the despot in question. But if rights are empty without the state to protect them, then the nature of the government that can be reasonably expected to emerge when tyranny has been overthrown becomes of crucial importance. The political ideas that are taught in universities do not often shape political practice in any direct fashion. But there can be little doubt that those who promoted the Iraq War believed the removal of Saddam Hussein would allow something like liberal democracy to flourish in the country, and in believing this, they showed that their thinking had been molded by theories of rights that ignored the crucial role of the state. [.....]
Where the human-rights project has become harmful is in nurturing the sickly dream of a time when the intractable dilemmas of ethics and politics will be overcome, transcended in an empire of law. Human rights are not the last utopia — just the one we must presently live with. The pursuit of the impossible is too much a part of the modern Western tradition ever to be truly renounced. The idea that utopianism will disappear is itself a utopian dream. The most that can be hoped for is that the piety which surrounds human rights will be tempered from time to time with a little skeptical doubt. It is hard to think of a better start than Moyn’s seminal study."
See my post on Samuel Moyn's book here.
See Samuel Moyn's lecture on "The Last Utopia" (video, 48 minutes).
An excerpt from Moyn's book has been published in "The Nation" (August 30 -September 6, 2010), entitled "Human Rights in History". Also see his "On the Genealogy of Morals" from "The Nation" in 2007.
John Gray's latest book is "Black Mass: Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia" (Allen Lane, 2007).
"What Rawls Hath Wrought"
Excerpts:
"Undermining the narrative of a virtually inevitable human evolution, the notion that rights are the foundation of society came only with the rise of the Harvard philosopher John Rawls’s vastly influential A Theory of Justice (1971). In the years following, it slowly came to be accepted that human rights were the bottom line in political morality. [....] The belief that rights are fundamental in political ethics is a late twentieth-century fancy. [....].... it was Rawls’s work that was chiefly responsible for the triumph of the narrow type of liberalism that has since dominated Anglo-American political philosophy. The result was to promote a type of liberal legalism in which the rule of law was simply assumed, while politics was virtually ignored.
The most damaging effect of Rawls’s work was the neglect of the state that it produced. [.....] It is partly the loss of the insight that human rights can only be secured by an effective state that explains the failure of the regime-change policies promoted by neoconservatives and liberal hawks over the past decade. If rights are what humans possess in the absence of a repressive regime, all that needs to be done to secure human rights is to remove the despot in question. But if rights are empty without the state to protect them, then the nature of the government that can be reasonably expected to emerge when tyranny has been overthrown becomes of crucial importance. The political ideas that are taught in universities do not often shape political practice in any direct fashion. But there can be little doubt that those who promoted the Iraq War believed the removal of Saddam Hussein would allow something like liberal democracy to flourish in the country, and in believing this, they showed that their thinking had been molded by theories of rights that ignored the crucial role of the state. [.....]
Where the human-rights project has become harmful is in nurturing the sickly dream of a time when the intractable dilemmas of ethics and politics will be overcome, transcended in an empire of law. Human rights are not the last utopia — just the one we must presently live with. The pursuit of the impossible is too much a part of the modern Western tradition ever to be truly renounced. The idea that utopianism will disappear is itself a utopian dream. The most that can be hoped for is that the piety which surrounds human rights will be tempered from time to time with a little skeptical doubt. It is hard to think of a better start than Moyn’s seminal study."
See my post on Samuel Moyn's book here.
See Samuel Moyn's lecture on "The Last Utopia" (video, 48 minutes).
An excerpt from Moyn's book has been published in "The Nation" (August 30 -September 6, 2010), entitled "Human Rights in History". Also see his "On the Genealogy of Morals" from "The Nation" in 2007.
John Gray's latest book is "Black Mass: Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia" (Allen Lane, 2007).