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Responding to growing public anxiety about the current state of democracy, this book will appeal to scholars in political theory, history and anthropology, as well as to the wider educated public. It provides an analysis of changes in the deep structure of Western democracy offering new imaginaries of political order.
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Responding to growing public anxiety about the current state of democracy, this book will appeal to scholars in political theory, history and anthropology, as well as to the wider educated public. It provides an analysis of changes in the deep structure of Western democracy offering new imaginaries of political order.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 399g
- ISBN-13: 9781009350884
- ISBN-10: 1009350889
- Artikelnr.: 72008176
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 399g
- ISBN-13: 9781009350884
- ISBN-10: 1009350889
- Artikelnr.: 72008176
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Yaron Ezrahi (1940-2019) was an Israeli political theorist at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Known for his work on the relations between modern science and the rise of the modern liberal democratic state, Ezrahi was a leading voice on Israeli politics and democracy on the Israeli and the international media.
Preface Ruth HaCohen; Words from the author; Introduction; Part I. The Rise
of Western Politics Following the Collapse of Monistic Medieval Cosmology:
1. Nature as the transcendental imaginary of modern secular society:
preliminary considerations; 2. The rise of the western cosmological
dualistic nature/culture imaginary from a comparative perspective; 3. Risks
and innovations inherent in the unstable borderline between nature and
culture; Part II. The Emergence of the Epistemological Constitution of
Modern Democracy: 4. The imaginary of the modern voluntary individual as a
democratic political agency; 5. Democratic political causality; 6.
Objective public facts as political currency; 7. The visibility and
accountability of political power; 8. Objectivity as a fictional limit of
the political; Part III. The Dialectics of Objectification: Limiting Overt
and Enhancing Hidden Politics: 9. The objectifying gaze of science and
technology in the political context; 10. Economics as politics by other
means; 11. The virtual objectification of the law; Part IV. The Erosion of
the Epistemological Constitution of Modern Democracy: 12. The political
disempowerment of the individual citizen; 13. The elusiveness of political
causality; 14. The loss of self-evident public facts and the crisis of the
common-sense conceptions of reality; 15. The decay of the epistemological
norm of political visibility and accountability; 16. The fall of
objectivity and objectification; Part V. Democracy Beyond Modernity: Can a
Self-Fulfilling Democracy be Imagined in our Time?: 17. Early modernizers
of politics; 18. Critics of modern democracy; Concluding reflections;
Epilogue: 'Depth skepticism' and the roots of democratic crisis Dana
Blander.
of Western Politics Following the Collapse of Monistic Medieval Cosmology:
1. Nature as the transcendental imaginary of modern secular society:
preliminary considerations; 2. The rise of the western cosmological
dualistic nature/culture imaginary from a comparative perspective; 3. Risks
and innovations inherent in the unstable borderline between nature and
culture; Part II. The Emergence of the Epistemological Constitution of
Modern Democracy: 4. The imaginary of the modern voluntary individual as a
democratic political agency; 5. Democratic political causality; 6.
Objective public facts as political currency; 7. The visibility and
accountability of political power; 8. Objectivity as a fictional limit of
the political; Part III. The Dialectics of Objectification: Limiting Overt
and Enhancing Hidden Politics: 9. The objectifying gaze of science and
technology in the political context; 10. Economics as politics by other
means; 11. The virtual objectification of the law; Part IV. The Erosion of
the Epistemological Constitution of Modern Democracy: 12. The political
disempowerment of the individual citizen; 13. The elusiveness of political
causality; 14. The loss of self-evident public facts and the crisis of the
common-sense conceptions of reality; 15. The decay of the epistemological
norm of political visibility and accountability; 16. The fall of
objectivity and objectification; Part V. Democracy Beyond Modernity: Can a
Self-Fulfilling Democracy be Imagined in our Time?: 17. Early modernizers
of politics; 18. Critics of modern democracy; Concluding reflections;
Epilogue: 'Depth skepticism' and the roots of democratic crisis Dana
Blander.
Preface Ruth HaCohen; Words from the author; Introduction; Part I. The Rise
of Western Politics Following the Collapse of Monistic Medieval Cosmology:
1. Nature as the transcendental imaginary of modern secular society:
preliminary considerations; 2. The rise of the western cosmological
dualistic nature/culture imaginary from a comparative perspective; 3. Risks
and innovations inherent in the unstable borderline between nature and
culture; Part II. The Emergence of the Epistemological Constitution of
Modern Democracy: 4. The imaginary of the modern voluntary individual as a
democratic political agency; 5. Democratic political causality; 6.
Objective public facts as political currency; 7. The visibility and
accountability of political power; 8. Objectivity as a fictional limit of
the political; Part III. The Dialectics of Objectification: Limiting Overt
and Enhancing Hidden Politics: 9. The objectifying gaze of science and
technology in the political context; 10. Economics as politics by other
means; 11. The virtual objectification of the law; Part IV. The Erosion of
the Epistemological Constitution of Modern Democracy: 12. The political
disempowerment of the individual citizen; 13. The elusiveness of political
causality; 14. The loss of self-evident public facts and the crisis of the
common-sense conceptions of reality; 15. The decay of the epistemological
norm of political visibility and accountability; 16. The fall of
objectivity and objectification; Part V. Democracy Beyond Modernity: Can a
Self-Fulfilling Democracy be Imagined in our Time?: 17. Early modernizers
of politics; 18. Critics of modern democracy; Concluding reflections;
Epilogue: 'Depth skepticism' and the roots of democratic crisis Dana
Blander.
of Western Politics Following the Collapse of Monistic Medieval Cosmology:
1. Nature as the transcendental imaginary of modern secular society:
preliminary considerations; 2. The rise of the western cosmological
dualistic nature/culture imaginary from a comparative perspective; 3. Risks
and innovations inherent in the unstable borderline between nature and
culture; Part II. The Emergence of the Epistemological Constitution of
Modern Democracy: 4. The imaginary of the modern voluntary individual as a
democratic political agency; 5. Democratic political causality; 6.
Objective public facts as political currency; 7. The visibility and
accountability of political power; 8. Objectivity as a fictional limit of
the political; Part III. The Dialectics of Objectification: Limiting Overt
and Enhancing Hidden Politics: 9. The objectifying gaze of science and
technology in the political context; 10. Economics as politics by other
means; 11. The virtual objectification of the law; Part IV. The Erosion of
the Epistemological Constitution of Modern Democracy: 12. The political
disempowerment of the individual citizen; 13. The elusiveness of political
causality; 14. The loss of self-evident public facts and the crisis of the
common-sense conceptions of reality; 15. The decay of the epistemological
norm of political visibility and accountability; 16. The fall of
objectivity and objectification; Part V. Democracy Beyond Modernity: Can a
Self-Fulfilling Democracy be Imagined in our Time?: 17. Early modernizers
of politics; 18. Critics of modern democracy; Concluding reflections;
Epilogue: 'Depth skepticism' and the roots of democratic crisis Dana
Blander.







