Paul Ricoeur: The Promise and Risk of Politics"Paul Ricoeur is undoubtedly one of the most distinguised philosophers of the twentieth century, and this is the first book that critically examines his substantial and distinctive contribution to political theory. Prominent scholar Bernard P. Dauenhauer identifies an intellectual unity in Ricoeur's examinations of action, history, time, and language. The author argues that the central feature of Ricoeur's political thought is his claim that everything political is both paradoxical and historical. Dauenhauer details the influences of Aristotle, Kant, and Hegel on Ricoeur's thinking, as well as his intellectual dialogue with such interlocutors as Habermas, Levinas, Rawls, and Walzer. This engaging book is essential reading for anyone interested in the state of contemporary political thought and philosophy."--Page 4 de la couverture. |
Contents
Roots An Introduction | 1 |
Ricoeurs Early Political Thought | 19 |
Conceptual Advances | 59 |
Action Agency and Identity in Ricoeurs Mature Philosophical Anthropology | 99 |
From the Ethical Aim to the Moral Norm | 141 |
Through the Moral Norm to Practical Wisdom | 175 |
Political Fragility | 211 |
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Common terms and phrases
action agent autonomy basic calls categorical imperative Christian citizens civilization claims coeur communitarian conception concerning conflict constitutive critical cultural democracy deontological dialectic distinction distribution domain of politics Dosse economic Emmanuel Levinas Emmanuel Mounier Eric Weil essays ethical aim Ethics and Politics Éthique et morale Evanston Fallible fragility freedom fundamental Furthermore G.W.F. Hegel Gabriel Marcel genuine Hence hermeneutics historical community History and Truth human identity Ideology and Utopia imputable ineliminable insist institutions irreducible John Rawls justice Kathleen Blamey liberalism little ethics live locutionary act meaning moral norms Mounier multiple narrative Nonetheless nonviolence Northwestern University notion Oneself particular Paul Ricoeur person philosophical anthropology philosophy phronesis plurality Political Paradox political practice politique practical wisdom principle question rationality Rawls Rawls's reason recognize reflection respect Ricoeur argues Ricoeur says Ricoeur's political thought rule sense social society sort sphere task teleological Text themes tion tradition trans University Press values violence Walzer