Public Goods, Private Goods

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A01=Raymond Geuss
Ager publicus
Augustine of Hippo
Author_Raymond Geuss
Bankruptcy
Career
Category=JPA
Ceteris paribus
Civil inattention
Collective action
Consideration
Contempt
Criticism
Decree
Diogenes of Sinope
Disgust
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God
Ideology
Immunity from prosecution (international law)
Incumbent
Injunction
Institution
Intention (criminal law)
Ipso facto
John Dewey
Judith Jarvis Thomson
Legislation
Liberalism
Military service
Modernity
Monarchy
Narcissism
Pericles
Phenomenon
Philistinism
Philosopher
Political philosophy
Political spectrum
Political structure
Politician
Politics
Pollution
Prejudice
Principle
Private property
Private sphere
Public nuisance
Public opinion
Public policy
Religious experience
Result
Right to exist
Roman consul
Ross Harrison (academic)
Salary
Self-help
Self-image
Self-knowledge (psychology)
Self-sufficiency
Shame
Soren Kierkegaard
Spirituality
State (polity)
State of nature
Suggestion
The Other Hand
The Public Interest
Theory
Thought
Thucydides
Toleration
Uncertainty
Willful violation

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691117201
  • Weight: 198g
  • Dimensions: 114 x 191mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Oct 2003
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Much political thinking today, particularly that influenced by liberalism, assumes a clear distinction between the public and the private, and holds that the correct understanding of this should weigh heavily in our attitude to human goods. It is, for instance, widely held that the state may address human action in the "public" realm but not in the "private." In Public Goods, Private Goods Raymond Geuss exposes the profound flaws of such thinking and calls for a more nuanced approach. Drawing on a series of colorful examples from the ancient world, he illustrates some of the many ways in which actions can in fact be understood as public or private. The first chapter discusses Diogenes the Cynic, who flouted conventions about what should be public and what should be private by, among other things, masturbating in the Athenian marketplace. Next comes an analysis of Julius Caesar's decision to defy the Senate by crossing the Rubicon with his army; in doing so, Caesar asserted his dignity as a private person while acting in a public capacity. The third chapter considers St. Augustine's retreat from public life to contemplate his own, private spiritual condition. In the fourth, Geuss goes on to examine recent liberal views, questioning, in particular, common assumptions about the importance of public dialogue and the purportedly unlimited possibilities humans have for reaching consensus. He suggests that the liberal concern to maintain and protect, even at a very high cost, an inviolable "private sphere" for each individual is confused. Geuss concludes that a view of politics and morality derived from Hobbes and Nietzsche is a more realistic and enlightening way than modern liberalism to think about human goods. Ultimately, he cautions, a simplistic understanding of privacy leads to simplistic ideas about what the state is and is not justified in doing.
Raymond Geuss is Reader in Philosophy at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of "The Idea of a Critical Theory" and "History and Illusion in Politics".