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More Than Kings and Less Than Men

Tocqueville on the Promise and Perils of Democratic Individualism
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Publisher:
 2012

Summary

More than Kings and Less than Men: Tocqueville on the Promises and Perils of Democratic Induvidualism examines Alexis de Tocqueville's hopes and fears for modern democracy, arguing that the distinctive political philosophy informing Democracy in America can help us to think more profoundly about the problems facing liberal democratic society today. L. Joseph Hebert, Jr. argues that Tocqueville saw the historical power of democracy as originating in its promise to liberate human nature, and the greatness it is capable of achieving, from the artificial constraints of conventional hierarchy. He probes Tocqueville's fear that the momentum of democratic change may violate that promise by neglecting or even stifling human greatness in the name of an artificial equality of conditions. Hebert explains why Tocqueville saw the need for a 'new political science' to regulate democracy, and why Tocqueville thought that the central task of this science, supported by enlightened statesmanship, was to combat 'individualism,' an extreme form of civic, moral, and intellectual apathy capable of ushering in a historically unprecedented form of despotism. Hebert looks in depth at the principles of Tocqueville's political science, their relation to classical, modern, and contemporary political thought, and their practical applications in his time and ours. He outlines the model Tocqueville recommended for a free and flourishing modern democratic order and analyzes the primary mechanisms Tocqueville proposed for avoiding the perils and securing the promise of democracy in his own day. Hebert observes that many of Tocqueville's fears regarding individualism are occurring today, and analyzes how Tocqueville's insights might be applied to combat individualism and promote genuine liberty in our own time.



Bibliographic data

Edition
1/2012
Copyright year
2012
ISBN-Print
978-0-7391-3374-3
ISBN-Online
978-0-7391-3376-7
Publisher
Lexington, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
213
Product type
Book Titles

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Table of Contents No access
    2. Acknowledgments No access
  1. Introduction: Why Tocqueville? Why Individualism? No access Pages 1 - 12
    1. 1: Democracy, Political Science, and Human Nature No access
    2. 2: Liberty, Rights, and Justice in the New World No access
    3. 3: Majority Tyranny, Administrative Despotism, and the Triumph of Individualism No access
    1. 4: Citizenship: Democracy vs. Self-Government? No access
    2. 5: Religion: Separation, or Political Institution? No access
    3. 6: Democratic Statesmanship Then and Now No access
  2. Conclusion: Liberty and the Recovery of Human Greatness No access Pages 191 - 196
  3. References No access Pages 197 - 204
  4. Index No access Pages 205 - 212
  5. About the Author No access Pages 213 - 213

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