Recovering from its initial shock and resulting total absorption
in the Watergate political scandal, the United States in the
mid-1970s began to address itself to the moral implications of its
politics, both national and international. The national concern
with political values provided the 1976 presidential and
congressional elections with perhaps the single most-discussed
issue and continues to influence a generally more scrutinizing
approach toward national policy. Are we using the best system of
values to examine the nation's political problems? Must we forsake
idealism for realism? These are two questions that Kenneth W.
Thompson systematically discusses in his penetrating examination of
the role that values play in America's political relations with the
other nations of the world.
In an effort to establish a common denominator for solving
global problems, Thompson provides three major perspectives for
policy: morality (what is right), power (what gains the most), and
functionalism (what works the best to solve the problem), and he
demonstrates the necessity for all three. As vice-president of the
Rockefeller Foundation, Thompson was in charge of international
cooperation in agriculture, education, and health in less-developed
countries. In this position he gained firsthand knowledge of
functionalism, which, he points out, can be practiced within the
framework of power and ethics.
Thompson says the issue of power -- particularly the United
States' power -- in the coming century demands that nations act in
a moral and rational manner. He reminds us that although experience
is a competent guide, there is also much to be learned from the
change that so dramatically confronts society as it moves into a
world of interdependence.
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