The essays and lectures first collected here span a period of over
25 years and cover the greater part of Joseph Cropsey's illustrious
career of scholarship and teaching at the University of Chicago.
They are presented in the order in which he wrote them. The central
problem of human thought and existence, according to Cropsey, is
that it is absolutely impossible for a human being to understand
his human condition without understanding his position within the
whole of which the human is only a part. Our imperfect knowledge of
the whole therefore places limits on our knowledge of ourselves,
for we do not know where we stand in relation to the whole that
conditions us, and therewith our own condition. What then should we
do in the face of our irremediable ignorance and uncertainty?
Cropsey argues that the difficulties currently faced by liberalism
arise from the efforts of later thinkers to elevate it beyond its
Hobbesian origins in self-preservation and natural necessity. As a
result of their flights from nature to morality, the sovereignty
that for Hobbes protected natural rights decayed into a mere
legalism that undermines liberalism's ability to defend itself.
Cropsey explores the tendencies within liberalism toward both
self-abnegation and self-assertion as well as the resources in the
Western tradition that can help fortify contemporary liberalism.
Both Scripture and Plato, for example, insist that our "flights
from nature" remain cognizant of human limitation. And the robust
strands of modernity, found in the works of Locke and Smith as well
as of Hobbes, demonstrate the benefits of a freedom within the
limits of nature. In contrasting liberal democracy and Marxism -
the version of modern politics that best exemplifies the flight
from nature - Cropsey finds that liberal democracy manifests a
spirited animus against being ruled by others, and celebrates
individual choice, whereas Marxism allows a freedom to will only
the rational, as it emerges in history, and aspires to replace the
competitiveness of bourgeois life with an affectionate sociability.
Cropsey also shows how liberalism's separation of church and state,
which replaces Hobbes' teaching on sovereignty, serves in fact to
protect civil supremacy by limiting religious authority to the
private sphere at the same time that it moderates the state by
depriving it of any claim to divine support. But he warns against
the complacency implied in the thesis that liberal democracy
represents the end or culmination of history. Looking further at
the resources within the tradition that might strengthen
contemporary liberalism, Cropsey challenges not merely orthodoxies
of Platonic scholarship, but the very distinction between ancients
and moderns, the identification of philosophy with reason, and
ultimately the dichotomy between reason and revelation. Cropsey's
equating the meaning of an open society with openness to the
activity of philosophy within it might appear to be in tension with
Plato's famous description in the Republic of a closed society
ruled by philosopher-kings. But Cropsey shows that in the Timaeus,
which provides a cosmological setting for the activity of the
Republic's city, Plato himself questions the intelligibility of the
whole. In his analysis of Plato's Philebus Cropsey emphasizes the
disjunction between the finite, intelligible and infinite,
unintelligible elements.. The inscrutability of the whole connects
philosophy to revelation as well as philosophy's political activity
to an open or liberal society. Crospey's essays represent
experiments in philosophic interpretations of our world, which draw
on the political and philosophical thought that has helped to form
that world and that help us to evaluate our strengths and
weaknesses in light of our essential humanity.
General
Imprint: |
St. Augustine's Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
March 2012 |
First published: |
March 2012 |
Authors: |
Joseph Cropsey
|
Dimensions: |
243 x 154 x 20mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover - Paper over boards
|
Pages: |
208 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-58731-611-1 |
Categories: |
Books >
Humanities >
Philosophy >
General
Books >
Philosophy >
General
|
LSN: |
1-58731-611-0 |
Barcode: |
9781587316111 |
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!