Michael Oakeshott and the Cambridge School on the History of Political Thought

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A01=Martyn P. Thompson
Author_Martyn P. Thompson
Cambridge School
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Civil Society
contextual analysis in political thought
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Everyday Beliefs
Historical Enquiry
historical epistemology
historiography of ideas
History
Hobbes's Argument
Hobbes's Leviathan
Hobbes's Moral Philosophy
Hobbes's Political
Hobbes’s Argument
Hobbes’s Leviathan
Hobbes’s Moral Philosophy
Hobbes’s Political
Hohe Schule
ideology versus philosophy
intellectual history
Mark Bevir
Michael Oakeshott
modernist historical enquiry
Oakeshott
Oakeshott's Account
Oakeshott's Argument
Oakeshott's Criticism
Oakeshott's Ideas
Oakeshott's Philosophy
Oakeshott's Point
Oakeshott's Terms
Oakeshott's Understanding
Oakeshott's View
Oakeshott's Works
Oakeshottian Conception
Oakeshott’s Account
Oakeshott’s Argument
Oakeshott’s Criticism
Oakeshott’s Ideas
Oakeshott’s Philosophy
Oakeshott’s Point
Oakeshott’s Terms
Oakeshott’s Understanding
Oakeshott’s View
Oakeshott’s Works
Past Terms
Philosophical Jurisprudence
Political Theory
political theory methodology
Political Thought
Practical Past
Practical Political Arguments

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032092430
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book is a critique of Cambridge School Historical Contextualism as the currently dominant mode of history of political thought, drawing upon Michael Oakeshott’s analysis of the logic of historical enquiry.

While acknowledging that the early Cambridge School work represented a considerable advance towards genuinely historical histories of political thought, this work identifies two major historiographical problems that have become increasingly acute. The first is general: an insufficiently rigorous understanding of the key concept of "pastness" necessarily presupposed in historical enquiry of all kinds. The second is specific to histories of political thought: a failure to do justice to the varieties of past political thinking, especially differences between ideology and philosophy. In addressing these problems, the author offers a comprehensive account of the history of political thought that establishes the parameters not just of histories of ideological thinking but also of the much disputed character of histories of political philosophy. Since rethinking history of political thought in Oakeshottian terms requires resisting current pressures to turn history into the servant of currently felt needs, the book offers a sustained defence of the cultural value of modernist historical enquiry against its opponents.

An important work for political theorists, historians of political thought and those researching intellectual history, the philosophy of history and proposed new directions in contemporary historical studies.

Martyn P. Thompson is Associate Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Political Science at Tulane University, USA. His main fields of research and publication are the history of political thought since the Renaissance, literature and politics and contemporary German political theory. He was formerly Professor of English Literature and Intellectual History at Tübingen University, Germany where his research and publications focused on English political and satirical literature of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as well as German theories of literary history.

Professor Thompson has two doctorates, the first a Ph.D. in the history of political thought from the London School of Economics, the second (the Habilitation) in English literature and cultural history from Tübingen University. He has been a faculty member in the universities of London, Tübingen, Cambridge and Tulane. His honors include a Fellow Commonership (now a By-Fellowship) at Churchill College, Cambridge University; Fellowships at the Huntington Library and the William Andrews Clark Library in California; and honorary life memberships of the R.G. Collingwood Society and the Michael Oakeshott Association.

His publications include: Ideas of Contract in English Political Thought in the Age of John Locke (1987); an edited volume, Locke and Kant: Historical Reception and Contemporary Relevance (1991); and many book chapters and articles in major journals including the American Historical Review, Political Studies, Political Theory, Historical Journal, Journal of the History of Ideas, and History and Theory. He has been co-editor and contributor to the annual Politisches Denken Jahrbuch from its inaugural edition in 1991 to the present.

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