Politics in America are polarized and trivialized, perhaps as
never before. In Congress, the media, and academic debate,
opponents from right and left, the Red and the Blue, struggle
against one another as if politics were contact sports played to
the shouts of cheerleaders. The result, Ronald Dworkin writes, is a
deeply depressing political culture, as ill equipped for the
perennial challenge of achieving social justice as for the emerging
threats of terrorism. Can the hope for change be realized? Dworkin,
one the world's leading legal and political philosophers,
identifies and defends core principles of personal and political
morality that all citizens can share. He shows that recognizing
such shared principles can make substantial political argument
possible and help replace contempt with mutual respect. Only then
can the full promise of democracy be realized in America and
elsewhere.
Dworkin lays out two core principles that citizens should
share: first, that each human life is intrinsically and equally
valuable and, second, that each person has an inalienable personal
responsibility for identifying and realizing value in his or her
own life. He then shows what fidelity to these principles would
mean for human rights, the place of religion in public life,
economic justice, and the character and value of democracy. Dworkin
argues that liberal conclusions flow most naturally from these
principles. Properly understood, they collide with the ambitions of
religious conservatives, contemporary American tax and social
policy, and much of the War on Terror. But his more basic aim is to
convince Americans of all political stripes--as well as citizens of
other nations with similar cultures--that they can and must defend
their own convictions through their own interpretations of these
shared values.
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