Lexington Books
Pages: 126
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-0860-4 • Paperback • March 2005 • $49.99 • (£38.00)
Subjects: History / General,
History / Europe / General,
History / Europe / Western,
History / Europe / Germany,
History / World,
History / Modern / General,
History / Modern / 18th Century,
History / Civilization,
History / Essays,
Philosophy / General,
Philosophy / Metaphysics,
Philosophy / Methodology,
Philosophy / Political,
Philosophy / Criticism,
Philosophy / Movements / General,
Social Science / Human Geography,
Social Science / Methodology,
Social Science / Essays
GZrard Raulet is Professor of the History of Ideas at L'UniversitZ de Paris, Sorbonne, and Chair of the Weimar Culture Research Group at Maison des Sciences de L'Homme/CNRS.
Chapter 1 Can Political Philosophy Cope with Globalization? On the Antinomies of Globalist Neo-cosmology
Chapter 2 Citizenship, Otherness, and Cosmopolitanism in Kant
Chapter 3 Europe as Critical Theory
Chapter 4 The Republic: A Moral or a Teleological Community? Thoughts on Integration
Chapter 5 Exoticism Within: An Epistemological Inventory
This book, informed by an subtle and cogent reading of Kant's political philosophy, provides not only a basis for resistance, but insight into the potential for the kind of understanding of citizenship which takes the experience of nations into account.
— David Rasmussen,From the Introduction, Professor, Department of Philosophy, Boston College
Too little known in the English-speaking world until the publication of this essay, though long held in high regard among European social philosophers, Gérard Raulet offers a unique and powerful perspective on the most salient issues in the contemporary social and political world. Strongly influenced by the traditions of Kant and of French Republicanism, he shows a keen sense of the dangers of both unbridled capitalism and "multiculturalism," defends the continuing importance of the nation-state within a cosmopolitan framework, and subtly analyzes the interrelated roles of morality, legality, and teleology in generating a viable political theory for our time.
— William McBride, Department of Philosophy, Purdue University
We need all the rigorous thinking we can muster to make sense of globalizations implications and challenges. In this suggestive and thought-provoking essay, Raulet moves the debate forward in productive ways. As in everything by Raulet that I have read, this book shows a bredth of learning and acuity of analytical imagination....
— Martin Jay, Sidney Hellman Ehrman Professor of History, University of California, Berkeley