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Lincoln's Tragic Pragmatism - Lincoln, Douglas, and Moral Conflict (Hardcover, New)
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Lincoln's Tragic Pragmatism - Lincoln, Douglas, and Moral Conflict (Hardcover, New)
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In 1858, challenger Abraham Lincoln debated incumbent Stephen
Douglas seven times in the race for a U.S. Senate seat from
Illinois. More was at stake than slavery in those debates. In
Lincoln's Tragic Pragmatism, John Burt contends that the very
legitimacy of democratic governance was on the line. In a United
States stubbornly divided over ethical issues, the overarching
question posed by the Lincoln-Douglas debates has not lost its
urgency: Can a liberal political system be used to mediate moral
disputes? And if it cannot, is violence inevitable? As they
campaigned against each other, both Lincoln and Douglas struggled
with how to behave when an ethical conflict as profound as the one
over slavery strained the commitment upon which democracy
depends-namely, to rule by both consent and principle. This
commitment is not easily met, because what conscience demands and
what it is able to persuade others to consent to are not always the
same. While Lincoln ultimately avoided a politics of morality
detached from consent, and Douglas avoided a politics of expediency
devoid of morality, neither found a way for liberalism to mediate
the conflict of slavery. That some disputes seemed to lie beyond
the horizon of deal-making and persuasion and could be settled only
by violence revealed democracy's limitations. Burt argues that the
unresolvable ironies at the center of liberal politics led Lincoln
to discover liberalism's tragic dimension-and ultimately led to
war. Burt's conclusions demand reevaluations of Lincoln and
Douglas, the Civil War, and democracy itself.
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