Problem with Multiculturalism

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A01=John M. Headley
Academic Departmental Chairs
American Education
Author_John M. Headley
British Political Practices
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Church's Canon Law
Church’s Canon Law
Civic Polity
Civil Theology
comparative civilizations
Congregatio De Propaganda Fide
cultural identity formation
De Procuranda Indorum Salute
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Francisco De Toledo
God's Left Hand
God’s Left Hand
Hellenistic Stoicism
intellectual history
John M. Headley
La Civil Conversatione
Late Medieval Western Europe
Marquis De Mirabeau
neo-Confucian Revival
Novus Ordo Seclorum
process
religious pluralism
Roman Imperial Order
Scriptural Beginnings
Secular Engagement
secularization impact on global societies
secularization theory
Single Uniform System
Sixteenth Century Jesuit
Sociopolitical Understanding
Tentative Recommendations
universalizing
West's Idea
Western political thought
West’s Idea
World's European Dominance
World’s European Dominance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412854979
  • Weight: 230g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Oct 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The horrors of the past century have done little to advance appreciation for the virtues of Western civilization. Criticism of the West has mounted and the West itself has lost sight of its uniqueness. Westerners tend to endow other societies with liberal philosophy and practices. While politically profitable, this fails to educate these societies about their own civilizations' contributions to the idea of a common humanity, human rights, and the legitimacy of dissent and diversity.

John M. Headley argues for the West's uniqueness and universality, while critiquing multiculturalism's failure to recognize these special characteristics. He looks to civilization rather than to the nation-state as the source of the West's achievements, arguing that its uniqueness was evident from its beginnings.

Headley also seeks to advance the ever-contentious discussion about secularization. He sees secularization as a neutralizing force regarding the religions of other civilizations, allowing them to accept Western influence, which thus becomes universal. To understand secularization and how it operates from a naturalistic perspective, one must see civilization itself as a defining element in world affairs.

John M. Headley is professor emeritus of history at the University of North Carolina, USA. His research interests include reform, reform programs, and their reception and distortion, particularly during the Renaissance, Reformation, and seventeenth-century Europe. His books include The Europeanization of the World, The Emperor and His Chancellor, and Tommaso Campanella and the Transformation of the World.

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