Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 368
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-8513-4 • Paperback • July 1997 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
Richard G. Stevens is a retired former professor of political science at the National Defense University. He is the author of Frankfurter and Due Process, and the co-editor, with Morton Frisch, of American Political Thought and The Political Thought of American Statesmen.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 Introduction
Part 3 Part I: Aspects of Modern Political Philosophy
Chapter 4 The People, the Great, and the Wise (1992)
Chapter 5 Machiavelli's Burlesque of Aristotle's Ethics (1986)
Chapter 6 On the Practicality of More's Utopia (1966)
Chapter 7 The New Republic in More's Utopia (1969)
Chapter 8 Abstraction and Practicability in the Political Philosophy of Hobbes (1989)
Part 9 Part II: The American Constitution
Chapter 10 The Constitutional Completion of the Liberal Philosophy of Hobbes and Locke (1987)
Chapter 11 Introduction to the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution (1994)
Chapter 12 George Washington and the Constitution (1982)
Chapter 13 The Significance of a Written Constitution for America (1987)
Chapter 14 Due Process of Law (1987)
Part 15 Part III: On Constitutional Commentators
Chapter 16 Felix Frankfurter (1971)
Chapter 17 The Constitution and What It Meant to Corwin (1980)
Chapter 18 Liberal Democracy and Justice in the Constitution of Walter Berns (1993)
Chapter 19 Restoration or Illusion? A Review of George Will (1993)
Chapter 20 The Old Republic and the New: A Review of paul Rahe (1994)
Part 21 Part IV: Difficulties
Chapter 22 Conscience and Politics (1984)
Chapter 23 The Problem of the Division of Labor in Marx (1970)
Chapter 24 Ethnic Diversity (1980)
Chapter 25 Liberal Education (1975)
Chapter 26 Notes
Chapter 27 Table of Cases
Chapter 28 Index
Richard Stevens' collection of essays reflects over forty years of thoughtful inquiry on the relationship between philosopy and political life. His views can, in the best sense of the term, be described as radical in their rethinking of the foundations of the American political and constitutional order. The range of his learning and the care with which he presents it should inspire young scholars to pick up on his ideas and apply them to the problems and dilemmas that they will face in the twenty-first century.
— Jerome J. Hanus, American University
An occasion for celebration.
— Paul Rahe, Hillsdale College
Few have written of America with such a judicious mixture of generosity, hardheadedness, and wit. Students of the Constitution and of political thought will wish to place this book on their shelves next to the collected essays of Walter Berns, Martin Diamond, and Herbert J. Storing.
— Matthew J. Franck, Radford University
Following in the tradition of Martin Diamond and Herbert Storing, Stevens' collection of essays broadens and deepens our understanding of the American regime, opening our minds to its great perfections, but never mindless of its imperfections. It is truly a seminal study.
— Morton J. Frisch, Northern Illinois University