Moral Selfhood in the Liberal Tradition

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2000-02-01
Publisher(s): Univ of Toronto Pr
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Summary

Recent critiques of the foundations of liberalism from communitarian, socialist, postmodern, and other philosophical circles have served to remind liberals of several problematic assumptions at the heart of liberal doctrine from its inception to the present day. Such critiques necessitate a rethinking of the foundations of liberalism, and in particular those regarding the self and rationality that liberal politics presupposes. Beginning with a wide-ranging discussion of liberal philosophers - including Hobbes, Locke, Kant, Green, Mill, and Rawls - Paul Fairfield proposes that liberalism requires a complete reconception of moral selfhood, one that accommodates elements of the contemporary critiques without abandoning liberal individualism. The model that emerges is one of situated agency - of a historically and linguistically constituted being who is never without the capacity for individual and autonomous expression. Fairfield defends a narrative conception of moral selfhood in the tradition of phenomenological hermeneutics, one that affords a proper vantage point from which to support and interpret liberal principles.

Author Biography

Paul Fairfield is the author of "Moral Selfhood in the Liberal Tradition."

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 3(12)
Part One: The Metaphysics of Individuality
The Classical Liberals
15(36)
A Classical Fable
17(7)
Hobbes: The Appetitive Machine
24(6)
Locke: The Rational Proprietor
30(6)
Rousseau: The Historicized Self
36(9)
Kant: The Rational Will
45(6)
Utilitarian and New Liberals
51(36)
The Transformation of Liberal Doctrine
53(8)
Bentham: Homo Economicus
61(6)
Mill: Utilitarian Individuality
67(8)
Green: Individuality Socialized
75(5)
Hobhouse: The New Liberal Self
80(7)
Neoclassical Liberals and Communitarian Critics
87(56)
The Philosophy of the Self in Contemporary Liberal Theory
90(9)
Rawls: The Original Chooser
99(9)
Nozick: Homo Economicus, Again
108(6)
Communitarianism and Metaphysical Embarrassment
114(13)
Working Through Metaphysical Embarrassment
127(16)
Part Two: The Politics of Individuality
Changing the Subject: Refashioning the Liberal Self
143(41)
The Decline of the Worldless Subject
146(5)
A Hermeneutical-Pragmatic Philosophy of the Self
151(15)
The Self as a Situated Agent
166(18)
Rational Agency
184(26)
The Regime of Instrumentality
186(12)
Communicative Reason
198(12)
The Political Conditions of Agency
210(32)
The Free Society: A Justification
214(6)
The Free Society: An Interpretation
220(22)
Conclusion 242(5)
Notes 247(14)
Bibliography 261(14)
Index 275

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