A renowned scholar traces the evolution of modern political
philosophy. The Rise and Fall of Rational Control is a bold
interpretation of centuries of intellectual revolutions. Based on
Harvey C. Mansfield’s legendary Harvard course, taught for decades
to rapt classrooms, this volume is both a grand work of ideas and an
elucidating reflection on liberalism, its eclipse, and the possibility
of renewal. Mansfield locates the birth of modern political philosophy
in the work of Niccolò Machiavelli, the first to assert that the
objective of politics is not to achieve wishful ideals of justice or
virtue—as the ancients had it—but to manipulate the brute facts of
the world in service of interests. Here rational control, free from
the order of gods or God, is the key to achieving the modern order,
which can liberate humans from slavery and conflict. Hobbes and Locke
later develop Machiavelli’s modern idea, laying foundations for
liberalism. Then comes the first crisis in the form of Rousseau, who
introduces historical change into the very idea of reason, which
itself is said to evolve. After Rousseau, history takes center stage,
as witnessed in Kant, Marx, and Hegel. The second crisis of modernity
arrives with Nietzsche, who casts doubt on reason itself. Ever since,
political thought has been stranded in the desert of postmodernism,
where Machiavelli’s necessities are replaced by faded subjectivity.
Tracing the rise and fall of rational control, Mansfield asks where we
go from here. Can we progress beyond our unease with what is modern,
or should we aim to return somehow to what came before?
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The History of Modern Political Philosophy
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674303836
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter