Necessity of Choice

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A01=Louis Hartz
Ancient Greece
Ancient Greek Ideal
Author_Louis Hartz
Bentham's Utilitarian Hedonism
Benthamite Theory
Bentham’s Utilitarian Hedonism
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Category=JPF
century
Civil Religion
coercions
Common Conservatism
corporate
Economic Liberty
Eighteenth Century Thinking
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European conservatism
Feudal Socialists
Free Plurality
Handicraft Stage
Hartz Louis
intellectual freedom
Intuitive Element
law
Liberal Nationalism
liberalism
Louis De Bonald
Mid-nineteenth Century Liberalism
natural
Natural Law Concept
Natural Law Thinking
Nineteenth Century Liberalism
nineteenth century political ideologies
order
paul Roazen
political philosophy
Reactionary Theorists
revolutionary theory
rousseauian
Rousseauian Solution
Rube Goldberg Device
social
Social Coercion
social contract theory
society
state autonomy
Statist Mentality
Utilitarian Liberalism
Violated

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412854870
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Louis Hartz is best known for his classic study, The Liberal Tradition in America. At Harvard University, his lecture course on nineteenth-century politics and ideologies was memorable. Through the editorial hand of Paul Roazen, we can now share the experience of Hartz's considerable contributions to the theory of politics.

At the root of Hartz's work is the belief that revolution is not produced by misery, but by pressure of a new system on an old one. This approach enables him to explain sharp differences in revolutionary traditions. Because America essentially was a liberal society from its beginning and had no need for revolutions, America also lacked reactionaries, and lacked a tradition of genuine conservatism characteristic of European thought.

In lectures embracing Rousseau, Burke, Comte, Hegel, Mill, and Marx among others, Hartz develops a keen sense of the delicate balance between the role of the state in both enhancing and limiting personal freedom. Hartz notably insisted on the autonomy of intellectual life and the necessity of individual choice as an essential ingredient of liberty.

Louis Hartz (1919-1986) was professor of government at Harvard University, USA until he retired in 1974. He was a prominent political scientist and proponent of American exceptionalism. Paul Roazen (1936-2005) was professor emeritus of social and political science at York University in Toronto, Canada and is noted for his work on the history of psychoanalysis. Benjamin R. Barber is a senior research scholar at The Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society of The Graduate Center, The City University of New York, USA.

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