This book traces the rise and fall of political philosophies
since the 17th century. The second part of the book shows how the
general technique of cumulative learning from experience applies to
social legislation and social services, party politics to defence
strategy and to the trends that follow the modern explosion of
knowledge and capital. The main argument is that social control is
at its best a deliberate joint creation of and learning from social
experience; and in this sense political discipline although not the
same as logical or scientific discipline is like them a submission
to form, not force. The book gives a definite meaning to the idea
of human progress and finds reason for a restoration of political
hope and faith.
General
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