"The Radical Attitude and Modern Political Theory" focuses on the
appearance of an attitude towards modernity that can be best
described as radical. It emerges in discourses of politics and the
state from the Sixteenth century onwards and can be discerned in
many of the central texts of modern political theory, even those
that are usually understood to be conservative in character.
Accordingly, the attitude is best seen not as a coherent ideology
or tradition but as a series of conceptual resources that continue
to inform political discourse in the present.
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