BurkeHill and Wang, 1980 - 83 páginas In this concise yet powerful book, one of the twentieth century's most respected political philosophers presents a controversial reassessment of the political ideas and intellectual legacy of Edmund Burke. A practicing politician and powerful writer, full of ideas, Burke was intent on getting those ideas translated into government policies. But he was too much the impatient practitioner to set out his principles in a single book in the manner of Locke or Hume, leaving both admirers and opponents ample scope to reinterpret his work in different ways. Macpherson, however, finds Burke's views on political economy to be the one consistent factor in his thinking. Today Burke is often viewed as one of modern conservatism's founding lights, and in an era of global capitalism unfettered by national borders, Macpherson's reassessment of Burke's ideas is perhaps more timely than ever. -- Amazon.com. |
Dentro del libro
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Página 5
... claim not unreasonably to be as well , or better , versed in political economy than any other politician of his time ... claims as a political economist . Indeed , his most explicit statement of his economic assumptions came first in ...
... claim not unreasonably to be as well , or better , versed in political economy than any other politician of his time ... claims as a political economist . Indeed , his most explicit statement of his economic assumptions came first in ...
Página 14
... claim him as a great theorist or political philosopher : the only claim is that he revivified political practice by bringing it back to some moral principles . The liberals did not inquire how thorough or consistent those principles ...
... claim him as a great theorist or political philosopher : the only claim is that he revivified political practice by bringing it back to some moral principles . The liberals did not inquire how thorough or consistent those principles ...
Página 39
... claim of the English friends of the new French principles that those principles were the principles of the Whig Revolution in England a century earlier , Burke has no difficulty citing chapter and verse to the contrary . He con- cludes ...
... claim of the English friends of the new French principles that those principles were the principles of the Whig Revolution in England a century earlier , Burke has no difficulty citing chapter and verse to the contrary . He con- cludes ...
Contenido
The Irish adventurer | 8 |
The AngloEuropean wasp | 38 |
The bourgeois political economist | 51 |
Derechos de autor | |
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