
Title:
Beyond individualism : reconstituting the liberal self
Author:
Crittenden, Jack.
ISBN:
9780195073300
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
New York : Oxford University Press, 1992.
Physical Description:
x, 230 p. ; 25 cm.
Copies:
Available:*
Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Call Number | Shelf Location | Status | Item Holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | Book | BILKUTUP0119802 | JC571 .C698 1992 | Central Campus Library | Searching... | Searching... |
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Summary
Summary
In the examination of the conception of human nature, a duality is commonly perceived--the liberal self as atomistic, self-contained, even selfish; and the communitarian self as socially situated and defined through its environment. Crittenden argues that neither view is acceptable, drawing onrecent psychological research to expound on a theory of "compound individuality." This work includes a discussion of the compound individual as the self of liberalism, as well as a discussion of the sort of political organization that can generate personal identity constituted by liberal autonomyand communitarian sociality.
Table of Contents
Introduction | p. 3 |
I Behind Individualism | |
1. The Disposition of the Self | p. 13 |
Charles Taylor: The Disengaged Self Versus the Strong Evaluator | p. 14 |
Alasdair MacIntyre: Individualism Versus Narrative Unity | p. 21 |
Michael Sandel: The Unencumbered Self Versus the Socially Situated Self | p. 28 |
The Self as a Two-Track System | p. 34 |
2. The Theory of Compound Individuality | p. 38 |
Piaget's Cognitive Structures | p. 39 |
The Self-system: Process and Product | p. 42 |
Membership Versus Autonomy | p. 44 |
Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development | p. 52 |
Critiques of Kohlberg | p. 60 |
Liberal and Communitarian Selves Revisited | p. 63 |
II Beyond Individualism | |
3. Autonomous Selfhood: Individualism Versus Compound Individuality | p. 73 |
Defining Autonomy | p. 74 |
Individualism | p. 77 |
Contextualism and Compound Individuality | p. 82 |
Practicing Contextualism | p. 91 |
4. Political Participation: Self-development and Self-interest | p. 96 |
Participation as Cultivation of Character | p. 97 |
Mirroring: Habits of the Heart | p. 100 |
Empirical Support for Participation as Self-development | p. 104 |
Outcomes: Generating the Common Good | p. 108 |
Transforming Self-interests | p. 114 |
Rousseau's Self-interest Properly Understood | p. 117 |
Transcending Self-interest | p. 122 |
Why Obey? | p. 124 |
5. Veneration of Community | p. 129 |
What Is Community? | p. 130 |
Communitarians on Community | p. 135 |
Total Community | p. 137 |
Participation and Liberal Community | p. 142 |
III Reconstituting the Liberal Self | |
6. Socrates in a Pluralistic Tradition | p. 149 |
Retrospective | p. 149 |
Modern or "New" Liberals | p. 154 |
A New Liberal Psychology | p. 160 |
The Bugbear of Relativism | p. 163 |
Liberal Virtues and the Good Life | p. 168 |
Liberal Politics | p. 172 |
Liberal Lessons from Communitarianism | p. 177 |
Notes | p. 183 |
Bibliography | p. 209 |
Index | p. 224 |