Holding the Center

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A01=Eugene Goodheart
Author_Eugene Goodheart
Billy's Stutter
Billy’s Stutter
bipartisanship studies
Bismarck
Category=JP
Category=JPHC
Conservative Wisdom
Democratic Presidential System
democratic theory
Deutscher Views
Egalitarian Bias
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Eugene Goodheart
Health Care Reform Act
Horatio Alger Story
Imaginative Resistance
Imperfect Garden
Larger Stimulus Package
Manichean Rhetoric
Obama's Critics
Obama’s Critics
Occupy Wall Street
Otto Von Bismarck
OWS Participant
OWS Protestor
political moderation in democracy
political philosophy
Present Minded Historians
Public Option
separation of powers
Spontaneous Revolutions
Superb
Supermajority Rule
toleration in politics
Vere's Judgment
Vere’s Judgment
Welfare Reform
Whig Interpretation
Whig tradition

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138510630
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Politicians and pundits often scorn polarization and compromise the intransigence of the former and the feebleness of the latter without suggesting an alternative way. Polarization, when opposing forces are equal or close to equal in strength, leads to stalemate. Compromise threatens to betray one's conviction about what is essential. Ideally, a leader must combine conviction about what ought to be done with an open-minded awareness of unintended consequences.

The social sciences are or should be based, largely, on the premise that people are historical and social beings. Holding the Center follows this tradition, while focusing on the "trimming" aspect. In nautical terms, trimming indicates an adjustment of one's vessel to accommodate one's environment. In politics, it is to find common ground between extremes, not for the sake of compromise, but because reason does not have a single location on the political spectrum.

The twelve chapters in this book are brought together by Goodheart's argument that the Whig trimming tradition is the heart and soul of politics in the West, and that both democracy and democratic culture depend upon the trimming tradition's advocacy of toleration. What is needed now, he notes, is a transformation in our political culture in which humility and the admission of error enter the list of political virtues. Non-parliamentary democracy with its separation of powers depends for its proper functioning on compromise, especially in a time like ours of crisis and divided government.

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