In a compelling meditation on the ideas that shape our lives, one of
the world’s most provocative and creative philosophers explains how
his eccentric early years influenced his lifelong critique of
liberalism. Liberalism is so amorphous and pervasive that for most
people in the West it is background noise, the natural state of
affairs. But there are nooks and crannies in every society where the
prevailing winds don’t blow. Raymond Geuss grew up some distance
from the cultural mainstream and recounts here the unusual perspective
he absorbed: one in which liberal capitalism was synonymous with moral
emptiness and political complacency. Not Thinking like a Liberal is a
concise tour of diverse intellectual currents—from the
Counter-Reformation and communism to pragmatism and critical
theory—that shaped Geuss’s skeptical stance toward liberalism. The
bright young son of a deeply Catholic steelworker, Geuss was admitted
in 1959 to an unusual boarding school on the outskirts of
Philadelphia. Outside was Eisenhower’s America. Inside Geuss was
schooled by Hungarian priests who tried to immunize students against
the twin dangers of oppressive communism and vapid liberal capitalism.
From there Geuss went on to university in New York in the early days
of the Vietnam War and to West Germany, where critical theory was
experiencing a major revival. This is not a repeatable journey. In
tracing it, Geuss reminds us of the futility of abstracting lessons
from context and of seeking a universal view from nowhere. At the same
time, he examines the rise and fall of major political theories of the
past sixty years. An incisive thinker attuned to both the history and
the future of ideas, Geuss looks beyond the horrors of
authoritarianism and the shallow freedom of liberalism to glimpse a
world of genuinely new possibilities.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674276543
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter