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In this edited collection, Peter Lawler presents a lucid and comprehensive introduction to a diverse set of political issues according to Tocqueville. Democracy and Its Friendly Critics addresses a variety of modern political and social concerns, such as the moral dimension of democracy, the theoretical challenges to democracy in our time, the religious dimension of liberty, and the meaning of work in contemporary American Life. Taking innovative and unexpected approaches toward familiar topics, the essays present engaging insights into a democratic society, and the contributors include some of today's leading figures in political philosophy. No other collection on Tocqueville addresses contemporary American political issues in such a direct and accessible fashion, making this book a valuable resource for the study of political theory in America.
In this edited collection, Peter Lawler presents a lucid and comprehensive introduction to a diverse set of political issues according to Tocqueville. Democracy and Its Friendly Critics addresses a variety of modern political and social concerns, such as the moral dimension of democracy, the theoretical challenges to democracy in our time, the religious dimension of liberty, and the meaning of work in contemporary American Life. Taking innovative and unexpected approaches toward familiar topics, the essays present engaging insights into a democratic society, and the contributors include some of today's leading figures in political philosophy. No other collection on Tocqueville addresses contemporary American political issues in such a direct and accessible fashion, making this book a valuable resource for the study of political theory in America.
1 What Tocqueville Says to Liberals and Conservatives Today 2 National Character and National Soul 3 Liberty, Equality, Nobility: Kolnai, Tocqueville, and the Moral Foundation of Democracy 4 Tocqueville on Pantheism, Materialism, and Catholicism 5 The Modern Revolution and the Collapse of Moral Analogy: Tocqueville and Guizot 6 Alexis de Tocqueville on the Incommensurability of America's Founding Principles 7 Citizenship as a Vocation 8 Compassionate Conservatism and Biotechnology: Some Tocquevillian Reflections 9 Religion and the Limits of Liberal Pluralism 10 Profiles in American Thomism 11 Christian Love and the Foundations of American Politics: Winthrop, Jefferson, and Lincoln 12 Democracy's Darkside? Robert Kraynak's Catholic Reflections on the Soul in the Liberal Democratic Dispensation 13 Machiavelli Meets the Mob: Palminteri'sA Bronx Tale
Peter Augustine Lawler is Dana Professor of Government at Berry College.
There are many ways to read Tocqueville, but the authors of the
essays collected in this extraordinary volume read him in the best
way — as a partner in conversation about some of the most important
issues confronting us today: democracy, America, and the fate of
democracy in America.
*Damon Linker, Editor, FIRST THINGS*
These “friendly critics of democracy” go beyond the classic to
illuminate American culture and politics. Indeed, these superlative
essayists are forced to become friendly critics of Tocqueville in
order to complete their work, which culminates, in the most
ambitious essays, in the articulation of the relationship between
reason and revelation. Thus, the book is an invaluable reminder of
the need to understand America as containing within herself the
highest themes of political philosophy and hence as possibly the
best regime.
*Ken Masugi, The Claremont Institute and editor*
Thirteen essays, presented by Lawler, frequently use the
observations of de Tocqueville as a jumping off point for their
reflections on such topics as religion and materialism, the moral
foundations of democracy, citizenship as vocation, and other
matters.
*Reference and Research Book News*
Here in America, the land of sunny tolerance, it sometimes seems
that the criticism of modern egalitarian democracy is the only
truly unpardonable offense left ? a sin that is doubly heinous,
since it combines the theological vice of heresy with the political
vice of treason. But America deserves better than that, and the
good health of democracy requires it. This stimulating and valuable
collection gives fresh force to Tocqueville's great and enduring
insight, that the liberal-democratic ethos can beat its best only
when it is held in tension with the friendly criticism of other
principles...
*Wilfred M. McClay, University of Oklahoma*
Here in America, the land of sunny tolerance, it sometimes seems
that the criticism of modern egalitarian democracy is the only
truly unpardonable offense left — a sin that is doubly heinous,
since it combines the theological vice of heresy with the
political
vice of treason. But America deserves better than that, and the
good health of democracy requires it. This stimulating and
valuable collection gives fresh force to Tocqueville's great and
enduring insight, that the liberal-democratic ethos can be at
its
best only when it is held in tension with the "friendly criticism"
of other principles.
*Wilfred M. McClay, University of Oklahoma*
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