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Politics, Economy, and Society - Writings and Lectures, Volume 4 - Writings and Lectures, Volume 4

English · Hardback

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The philosophy of Paul Ricoeur is rarely viewed through the lens of political philosophy, and yet questions of power, and of how to live together in the polis, were a constant preoccupation of his writings. This volume brings together a selection of his texts spanning six decades, from 1958 to 2003, which together present Ricoeur's political project in its coherence and diversity.
 
In Ricoeur's view, the political is the realm of a tension between "rationality" (the attempt to provide a coherent explanation of the world) and "irrationality," which manifests itself in force and repression. This "political paradox" lies at the heart of politics, for the claim to explain the world generates its own form of violence: the more one desires the good, the more one is inclined to impose it. Ricoeur warns citizens, the guardians of democracy, against any totalizing system of thought and any dogmatic understanding of history. Power should be divided and controlled, and Ricoeur defends a form of political liberalism in which states are conscious of the limits of their power and respectful of the freedom of their citizens.
 
Ranging from questions of power and repression to those of ethics, identity, and responsibility, these little-known political texts by one of the leading philosophers of the twentieth century will be of interest to students and scholars of philosophy, politics, and theology and to anyone concerned with the great political questions of our time.

List of contents

Editor's Preface
 
Note on the French Edition
 
I. Theological-Political Prologue
 
Chapter 1. The Adventures of the State and the Task of Christians
 
Chapter 2. From Marxism to Contemporary Communism
 
Chapter 3. Socialism Today
 
II. The Paradoxes of the Political
 
Chapter 4. Hegel Today
 
Chapter 5. Morality, Ethics, and Politics
 
Chapter 6. Responsibility and Fragility
 
Chapter 7. The Paradoxes of Authority
 
Chapter 8. Happiness, Out of Place
 
III. Politics, Economy, and Societies
 
Chapter 9. Is Crisis a Phenomenon Specific to Modernity?
 
Chapter 10. Money: From One Suspicion to the Next
 
Chapter 11. The Erosion of Tolerance and the Resistance of the Intolerable
 
Chapter 12. The Condition of the Foreigner
 
Chapter 13. Fragile Identity: Respect for the Other and Cultural Identity
 
IV. Europe
 
Chapter 14. What new Ethos for Europe?
 
Chapter 15. The Dialogue of Cultures, the Confrontation of Heritages
 
Chapter 16. The Crisis of Historical Consciousness and Europe
 
V. Epilogue
 
Chapter 17. The Struggle for Recognition and the Economy of the Gift
 
Origin of the Texts
 
Notes
 
Index

About the author










Paul Ricoeur (1913-2005) is widely recognized as one of the most distinguished philosophers of the twentieth century. He was Professor of Philosophy at the Universities of Strasbourg and Paris and he taught for many years at the University of Chicago. His many works include Freud and PhilosophyTime and Narrative, and Oneself as Another.

Summary

The philosophy of Paul Ricoeur is rarely viewed through the lens of political philosophy, and yet questions of power, and of how to live together in the polis, were a constant preoccupation of his writings. This volume brings together a selection of his texts spanning six decades, from 1958 to 2003, which together present Ricoeur's political project in its coherence and diversity.

In Ricoeur's view, the political is the realm of a tension between "rationality" (the attempt to provide a coherent explanation of the world) and "irrationality," which manifests itself in force and repression. This "political paradox" lies at the heart of politics, for the claim to explain the world generates its own form of violence: the more one desires the good, the more one is inclined to impose it. Ricoeur warns citizens, the guardians of democracy, against any totalizing system of thought and any dogmatic understanding of history. Power should be divided and controlled, and Ricoeur defends a form of political liberalism in which states are conscious of the limits of their power and respectful of the freedom of their citizens.

Ranging from questions of power and repression to those of ethics, identity, and responsibility, these little-known political texts by one of the leading philosophers of the twentieth century will be of interest to students and scholars of philosophy, politics, and theology and to anyone concerned with the great political questions of our time.

Report

"Ricoeur's insights...can continue to inform our thinking today."
Society

Product details

Authors Kathleen Blamey, Ricoeur, Paul Ricoeur, Ricoeur Paul
Assisted by Kathleen Blamey (Translation), Blamey Kathleen (Translation)
Publisher Polity Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.08.2021
 
EAN 9781509543861
ISBN 978-1-5095-4386-1
No. of pages 280
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > General, dictionaries
Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Miscellaneous

Philosophie, Politik, Philosophy, Politische u. Ökonomische Philosophie, Political & Economic Philosophy, Allg. Philosophie, Philosophie des 20. Jhd., 20th Century Philosophy

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