Lexington Books
Pages: 222
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4985-9663-3 • Hardback • July 2019 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-4985-9664-0 • eBook • July 2019 • $90.00 • (£69.00)
Scott Robinson is assistant professor of political science at Houston Baptist University.
Lee Trepanier is professor of political science at Saginaw Valley State University.
David Whitney is associate professor of political science at Nicholls State University
Chapter 1: Rethinking Eric Voegelin’s Interpretation of Liberalism and Its History
David D. Corey
Chapter 2: The Necessity of Moral Communication in a Pluralistic Political Environment
Scott Robinson
Chapter 3: Defenders of Democracy: Freedom and Responsibility in America Today
Scott Robinson
Chapter 4: The Origins of Scientism: Revisited
David N. Whitney
Chapter 5: Voegelin, Rawls, and the Persistence of Liberal Civil Theology
Grant Havers
Chapter 6: The Comparative Politics of Eric Voegelin
Lee Trepanier
Chapter 7: The Dream of the Caliphate and the Loss of Reality: An Application of Eric Voegelin’s “The Origins of Totalitarianism” and “In Search of the Ground”
Scott Philip Segrest
Chapter 8: “The Five Ways of World-Empire”
Christopher S. Morrissey
Chapter 9: Eric Voegelin’s 1944 “Political Theory and the Pattern of General History”: An Account from the Biography of a Philosophizing Consciousness
Nathan Harter
In what is a book of very different essays that address the political corruptions of our era (for example, liberalism) – unexpected topics that heighten a reader’s anticipation of what “what will be the subject of the next essay?” – the authors not only have clarified and adopted Voegelin’s creative symbolism, they have demonstrated their use. The authors exemplify for the reader an instructive employment of creatively new tools of analysis provided in Voegelin’s symbolisms that can work to interpretatively critique political communities in the 21st Century.
— VoegelinView
Commentary on the work of Eric Voegelin has grown enormously since his death in 1985. This excellent collection of essays and analyses of Voegelin’s work published during the late 1950s and early 1960s adds greatly to our understanding of the development of his thought during this period and of its applicability to currently political realities. That it was written chiefly by younger scholars is further evidence of the enduring appeal of Voegelin’s political science.
— Barry Cooper, University of Calgary
Between 1940 and 1960 while he was working out his general theory of politics and history, Eric Voegelin also wrote a series of essays with a more pragmatic focus on democratization, empire, the “good society,” industrialization, science, and the possibility of moral communication in mass society. During this time he also moved to Munich in an effort to render socially effective the life of noetic reason in post-war Germany. Thus these essays are also examples of scholarly statecraft. The contributors to this volume follow his cues by considering those mid-career essays and reflecting pragmatically on contemporary political problems, including the current state of liberalism and progressivism, transhumanism, radical Islamism, and the state of the American polity. They admirably follow in Voegelin’s footsteps in bringing about “clarity of awareness” for scholar and citizen alike.
— John von Heyking, University of Lethbridge
The essays in this volume furnish a superb account of Voegelin’s mature interventions as a public intellectual. His return to Germany resulted in more invitations to speak on matters of broad public interest and his concern with the ideological cleavages of the day provoked him to offer the fruits of his historical meditation in a more contemporary setting. The contributors to this collection have rightly grasped the continuing relevance of Voegelin’s thought in the increasingly ideological climate of our own time. Eric Voegelin for Today is both a work of philosophic retrieval and a work of civic remediation that is sorely needed.
— David Walsh, Catholic University of America
Eric Voegelin is widely regarded as one of the preeminent political thinkers of the twentieth century. Present-minded academics may be tempted to thrust aside his insights as responses to bygone circumstances; but as this volume demonstrates, Voegelin’s piercing reflections on liberalism, modernity, ideology and mass politics remain relevant in the twenty-first century. By focusing on Voegelin’s postwar writings, rendering his insights up-to-date, and applying his perspective to the contemporary scene, the essays in Eric Voegelin Today offer vital contributions to discourse on contemporary politics and political thought, Voegelinian and otherwise.
— Alan Baily, Stephen F. Austin State University