Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Theodore Roosevelt, geopolitics, and cosmopolitan ideals

View through CrossRef
The central argument of this article is that Theodore Roosevelt’s worldview was formed at the intersection of geopolitics and cosmopolitan morality. The intellectual roots of his political and foreign policy convictions contributed to a diplomatic style for which the conventional labels of realism or idealism are both inadequate and misleading. Contrary to the stereotypical caricature of Roosevelt as an American architect of realpolitik, or ruthless man on horseback, he held a complex set of beliefs about international relations that transcends familiar academic theorising about either power politics or universal principles of morality. Neither the vision of international anarchy, nor the calculation of state capabilities, do justice to Roosevelt’s sense of the interplay between values and power in foreign policy conduct. Moral principles, Roosevelt claimed, help make clear the inescapable tension between ideals and reality. The moral problem persists, he thought, because foreign policy involves political choices obscured by faulty perception, controlled by national interests, and complicated by multiple purposes and goals. Roosevelt’s more nuanced worldview underscores the need for a revised historiography of international relations, one that builds upon the recognition that realists and idealists were never divided into clearly-identifiable camps either before or after the First World War.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Theodore Roosevelt, geopolitics, and cosmopolitan ideals
Description:
The central argument of this article is that Theodore Roosevelt’s worldview was formed at the intersection of geopolitics and cosmopolitan morality.
The intellectual roots of his political and foreign policy convictions contributed to a diplomatic style for which the conventional labels of realism or idealism are both inadequate and misleading.
Contrary to the stereotypical caricature of Roosevelt as an American architect of realpolitik, or ruthless man on horseback, he held a complex set of beliefs about international relations that transcends familiar academic theorising about either power politics or universal principles of morality.
Neither the vision of international anarchy, nor the calculation of state capabilities, do justice to Roosevelt’s sense of the interplay between values and power in foreign policy conduct.
Moral principles, Roosevelt claimed, help make clear the inescapable tension between ideals and reality.
The moral problem persists, he thought, because foreign policy involves political choices obscured by faulty perception, controlled by national interests, and complicated by multiple purposes and goals.
Roosevelt’s more nuanced worldview underscores the need for a revised historiography of international relations, one that builds upon the recognition that realists and idealists were never divided into clearly-identifiable camps either before or after the First World War.

Related Results

Theodore Roosevelt, 1858–1919
Theodore Roosevelt, 1858–1919
Theodore Roosevelt became the twenty-sixth president of the United States in September 1901 following the assassination of William McKinley. He won election in his own right in 190...
S-Ideals: A Unified Framework for Ideal Structures via Multiplicatively Closed Subsets
S-Ideals: A Unified Framework for Ideal Structures via Multiplicatively Closed Subsets
In this paper, we study ideals defined with respect to arbitrary multiplicatively closed subsets S⊆R of a commutative ring R. An ideal I⊆R is called an S-ideal if for all a,b∈R, th...
Theodore Roosevelt: Father of a Sporting Nation
Theodore Roosevelt: Father of a Sporting Nation
Theodore Roosevelt was, in many ways, the father of a sporting nation. Roosevelt, more than any president before, and perhaps since, sought to bind the presidency to the ideas of m...
Trust in the Lord and Do Good, 1876‒1886
Trust in the Lord and Do Good, 1876‒1886
Abstract This chapter begins by exploring Roosevelt’s four years at Harvard College. The death of his father in 1878 prompted extended religious musings and the clea...
Theodore Roosevelt, Forester
Theodore Roosevelt, Forester
Abstract The year 1958 marks the centennial of the birth of Theodore Roosevelt. The Congress of the United States in 1955 created the Theodore Roosevelt Centennial C...
Traces, ideals, and arithmetic means
Traces, ideals, and arithmetic means
This article grew out of recent work of Dykema, Figiel, Weiss, and Wodzicki (Commutator structure of operator ideals) which inter alia characterizes commuta...
Generated Fuzzy Quasi-ideals in Ternary Semigroups
Generated Fuzzy Quasi-ideals in Ternary Semigroups
Here in this paper, we provide characterizations of fuzzy quasi-ideal in terms of level and strong level subsets. Along with it, we provide expression for the generated fuzzy quasi...
Applications of Fuzzy Semiprimary Ideals under Group Action
Applications of Fuzzy Semiprimary Ideals under Group Action
Group actions are a valuable tool for investigating the symmetry and automorphism features of rings. The concept of fuzzy ideals in rings has been expanded with the introduction of...

Back to Top