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

Modern Pluralism

View through CrossRef
Pluralism is among the most vital intellectual movements of the modern era. Liberal pluralism helped reinforce and promote greater separation of political and religious spheres. Socialist pluralism promoted the political role of trade unions and the rise of corporatism. Empirical pluralism helped legitimate the role of interest groups in democratic government. Today pluralism inspires thinking about key issues such as multiculturalism and network governance. However, despite pluralism's importance, there are no histories of twentieth-century pluralist thinking. Modern Pluralism fills this gap. It explores liberal, socialist, and empirical ideas about diversity in Britain and the United States. It shows how pluralists challenged homogenous nations and sovereign states, often promoting sub-national groups as potential sites of self-government. In it, intellectual historians, political theorists, and social scientists collectively explore the historical background to present institutions and debates. The book serves to enrich our understanding of the history of pluralism and its continuing relevance.
Cambridge University Press
Title: Modern Pluralism
Description:
Pluralism is among the most vital intellectual movements of the modern era.
Liberal pluralism helped reinforce and promote greater separation of political and religious spheres.
Socialist pluralism promoted the political role of trade unions and the rise of corporatism.
Empirical pluralism helped legitimate the role of interest groups in democratic government.
Today pluralism inspires thinking about key issues such as multiculturalism and network governance.
However, despite pluralism's importance, there are no histories of twentieth-century pluralist thinking.
Modern Pluralism fills this gap.
It explores liberal, socialist, and empirical ideas about diversity in Britain and the United States.
It shows how pluralists challenged homogenous nations and sovereign states, often promoting sub-national groups as potential sites of self-government.
In it, intellectual historians, political theorists, and social scientists collectively explore the historical background to present institutions and debates.
The book serves to enrich our understanding of the history of pluralism and its continuing relevance.

Related Results

The Glue of the Universe
The Glue of the Universe
The chapter argues that there are two kinds of pluralism about causation that need to be recognized to prevent people talking past each other. The first is between broadly explanat...
Modern Slavery
Modern Slavery
This book provides a sobering look at modern-day slavery—which includes sex trafficking, domestic servitude, and other forms of forced labor—and documents the development of the mo...
Teaching in Unequal Societies
Teaching in Unequal Societies
This book considers teaching in modern institutional settings, among other things, as the ethical questioning and reversal of passively accepted prejudices, particularly in context...
Constraining Leviathan
Constraining Leviathan
In this chapter the place of Hobbes in relation to the twentieth-century crisis of civilization is explored through the writings of Schmitt and Oakeshott. The nature of the crisis ...
Historicizing the Elephant in the Room
Historicizing the Elephant in the Room
This chapter retraces the genealogy of the well-known parable of the “blind men and the elephants,” which is often cited by scholars who want to champion religious pluralism or inc...
Nicholas of Cusa
Nicholas of Cusa
For the first time in one volume in English are the spiritual writings of this outstanding intellectual figure (1401-1464) whose work anticipated modern problems of ecumenicity an...
The Sacred and the Law: The Durkheimian Legacy
The Sacred and the Law: The Durkheimian Legacy
There is little doubt about the importance of Emile Durkheim’s work and the influence it had on the social sciences. His insights into the realms of normativity in particular remai...
Modern in the Making
Modern in the Making
Today the Museum of Modern Art is widely recognized for establishing the canon of modern art; yet in its early years, the museum considered modern art part of a still unfolding exp...

Back to Top