John Rawls and the History of Political Thought

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A01=Jeffrey Bercuson
Amour Propre
Author_Jeffrey Bercuson
Category=JPA
Category=QDHR
Category=QDTS
citizenship obligations ethics
Civil Society
Comprehensive Commitments
Comprehensive Doctrine
Comprehensive Pluralism
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eq_non-fiction
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Ethics
Free Self-development
global justice debates
Good Life
Habermas 2008b
Hegel
Hegelian Features
Hegelian Heritage
International Difference Principle
Justice
Kant
Lectures on the History of Moral Philosophy
Lectures on the History of Political Philosophy
moral reasoning frameworks
Nonliberal Peoples
Plural Milieu
political philosophy theory
Political Theory and Philosophy
Public Reason
public reason analysis
Public Reason Revisited
Pure View
Rawls
Rawls 1999a
Rawls's Interpretation
Rawls's Political Philosophy
Rawls's Thought
Rawls's View
Rawls’s Interpretation
Rawls’s Political Philosophy
Rawls’s Thought
Rawls’s View
Reasonable Comprehensive Doctrines
Robust Reasonableness
Rousseau
Rousseau 1979a
Rousseau Hegel influence Rawls
Rousseau's Political Philosophy
Rousseau’s Political Philosophy
social contract tradition

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415737395
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Jun 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In this book, Jeffrey Bercuson presents the immense, and yet for the most part unrecognized, influences of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel on John Rawls, the most important political philosopher of the 20th century. While the well-documented influence of Immanuel Kant on Rawls is deep and profound, Kantian features and interpretation of justice as fairness do not tell the whole story about that doctrine.

Drawing on Rawls’s Lectures on the History of Moral Philosophy and his Lectures on the History of Political Philosophy, Bercuson presents the reader with a more nuanced, accurate account of the moral and political philosophy of Rawls in light of these under-appreciated influences. This new, richer image of Rawls’s political philosophy shows that Rawls’s notion of reasonableness – his notion of the kind and extent of our obligations to those fellows with whom we are engaged in social cooperation – is conspicuously more demanding, and therefore more attractive, than most interpreters and critics assume. Rawls turns to Rousseau and to Hegel, both of whom provide attractive images of engaged citizenship worthy of emulation.

Written accessibly, and contributing to key contemporary debates of global justice, this book will be read by scholars within the fields of social and political theory, ethics, and philosophy.

Jeffrey Bercuson is an Instructor of Political Science at the University of Toronto, Mississauga. He is currently at work on a book project that examines the role of religion in the public spheres of secular liberal polities.

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