Utopia

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A01=George Kateb
Arthur P. Mendel
Author_George Kateb
authoritarianism studies
B. F. Skinner
Barbara Golffing
Category=JHBA
Category=JPA
Christopher Jencks
Community Action Committees
Contemporary Utopia
critical theory
critiques of utopian social models
Deadly Nerve Gases
Deteriora Sequor
Deviant Values
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eugen Weber
Francis Golffing
Good Life
Great Refusal
Heaven's Hill
Heaven’s Hill
Humanistic Psychology Movement
Huxley's Critique
Huxley’s Critique
J. L. Talmon
Margaret Mead
Modern Sociological Theory
Nineteenth Century Utopias
political philosophy
Ralf Dahrendorf
Recent Sociological Theory
Rossum's Universal Robots
Rossum’s Universal Robots
social cohesion analysis
social engineering
Social System
Technetronic Society
technological determinism
Timeless
Usual Premises
utopian
Utopian Citizens
Utopian Convention
Utopian Satires
Utopian Society
Utopian Writer
Video Meliora Proboque
Witchetty Grubs
Zbigniew Brzezinski

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202361888
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 May 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Amid the twentieth century's seemingly overwhelming problems, some thinkers dared to envisage a world order governed by utopian proposals that would eliminate--or at least alleviate--the evils of society and secure positive advantages for all human beings. Others found this utopian optimism a hopeless fantasy and predicted a utopian order only repressiveness, boredom, and the impoverishment of human experience. The unique gathering of articles in Utopia vividly demonstrates the tension existing between utopian ideas and their proponents and the severe criticism of their adversaries.

Among utopia's enthusiastic supporters, B. F. Skinner outlines the educational practices needed to sustain his concept of utopia, while Margaret Mead sets forth a bold defense of utopian vision in her article "Towards More Vivid Utopias." In active opposition to modern utopian idealism, Ralf Dahrendorf, the prominent German sociologist and politician, compares utopia with a cemetery and criticizes its fixed and uneventful life, and J. L. Talmon predicts that, since utopianism postulates absolute social cohesion, there is no escape from dictatorship in the utopian design. Still another alternative is offered by Zbigniew Brzezinski, who bases his futurist ideology on the trends of technology in the advanced countries of the world, especially the United States. He sees in the conscious application of technical-scientific rationality by an intellectual elite the method by which the promises of modern knowledge can be made good.

Underscoring the fact that the utopian tradition can make us look at the real world with new eyes, George Kateb, the editor of Utopia, clarifies the terms of this long-standing debate and offers a thorough analysis of the "strong utopian impetus to save the world from as much of its confusion and disorder as possible." The work is an argument neither for utopian or anti-utopian visions. Rather it shows the possibilities of political norms in advancing the human condition in open societies.

George Kateb is William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics, Emeritus at Princeton University. He formerly had the roles of Director of the Program in Political Philosophy, Director of the Gauss Seminars, and Director of the University Center for Human Values all at Princeton University. His most recent book is Patriotism and Other Mistakes and he is also the author of many scholarly articles mainly in the fields of constitutional law and the Bill of Rights.

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