Rise and Fall of Rational Control

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A01=Harvey C. Mansfield
Author_Harvey C. Mansfield
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conservatism
constitutionalism
democracy
effectual truth
enlightenment
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eq_nobargain
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executive power
freedom and morality
great books
hegel
history of philosophy
hobbes
human nature
intellectual history
kant
liberalism
locke
machiavelli
modern political philosophy
modernity
nietzsche
philosophers
philosophy of history
political theory
postmodernism
rational control
reason and politics
rousseau
state of nature
tradition vs reason
western thought

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674298859
  • Weight: 642g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A renowned scholar traces the evolution of modern political philosophy.

The Rise and Fall of Rational Control is a bold interpretation of centuries of intellectual revolutions. Based on Harvey C. Mansfield’s legendary Harvard course, taught for decades to rapt classrooms, this volume is both a grand work of ideas and an elucidating reflection on liberalism, its eclipse, and the possibility of renewal.

Mansfield locates the birth of modern political philosophy in the work of Niccolò Machiavelli, the first to assert that the objective of politics is not to achieve wishful ideals of justice or virtue—as the ancients had it—but to manipulate the brute facts of the world in service of interests. Here rational control, free from the order of gods or God, is the key to achieving the modern order, which can liberate humans from slavery and conflict. Hobbes and Locke later develop Machiavelli’s modern idea, laying foundations for liberalism. Then comes the first crisis in the form of Rousseau, who introduces historical change into the very idea of reason, which itself is said to evolve. After Rousseau, history takes center stage, as witnessed in Kant, Marx, and Hegel. The second crisis of modernity arrives with Nietzsche, who casts doubt on reason itself. Ever since, political thought has been stranded in the desert of postmodernism, where Machiavelli’s necessities are replaced by faded subjectivity.

Tracing the rise and fall of rational control, Mansfield asks where we go from here. Can we progress beyond our unease with what is modern, or should we aim to return somehow to what came before?

Harvey C. Mansfield is William R. Kenan, Jr., Research Professor of Government at Harvard University. The author and translator of many books, he has held Guggenheim and NEH Fellowships and is a recipient of the National Humanities Medal.

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