Reading Leo Strauss

Regular price €50.99
A01=Steven B. Smith
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Author_Steven B. Smith
Category=QDH
choice
city man
democracy
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extremism
freedom
gershom scholem
heidegger
interest group
jerusalem
judaism
liberalism
mass behavior
moderation
natural right and history
neoconservatism
nonfiction
on tyranny
philosophy
plato
political science
politics
power
radicalism
rationality
reason
religion
revelation
skepticism
spinoza
will
zionism

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226764023
  • Weight: 482g
  • Dimensions: 16 x 23mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2006
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Interest in Leo Strauss is greater now than at any time since his death, mostly because of the purported link between his thought and the political movement known as neoconservatism. Steven B. Smith, though, surprisingly depicts Strauss not as the high priest of neoconservatism but as a friend of liberal democracy - perhaps the best defender democracy has ever had. Moreover, in "Reading Leo Strauss", Smith shows that Strauss's defense of liberal democracy was closely connected to his skepticism of both the extreme Left and the extreme Right. Smith asserts that this philosophical skepticism defined Strauss's thought. It was as a skeptic, Smith argues, that Strauss considered the seemingly irreconcilable conflict between reason and revelation - a conflict Strauss dubbed the "theologico-political problem". Calling this problem "the theme of my investigations," Strauss asked the same fundamental question throughout his life: what is the relation of the political order to revelation in general and Judaism in particular? Smith organizes his book with this question, first addressing Strauss's views on religion and then examining his thought on philosophical and political issues. In his investigation of these philosophical and political issues, Smith assesses Strauss's attempt to direct the teaching of political science away from the examination of mass behavior and interest group politics and toward the study of the philosophical principles on which politics are based. With his provocative, lucid essays, Smith goes a long way toward establishing a distinctive form of Straussian liberalism.
Steven B. Smith is the Alfred Cowles Professor of Political Science at Yale University. He is the author of four books, most recently Spinoza's Book of Life: Freedom and Redemption in the "Ethics."