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Thomas Jefferson and the Politics of Nature (FRANK COVEY LOYOLA L)
Thomas Engeman
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Description for Thomas Jefferson and the Politics of Nature (FRANK COVEY LOYOLA L)
Paperback. A collection of late 20th-century scholarship devoted to Thomas Jefferson as a politician, writer, philosopher, Christian and economist. Editor(s): Engeman, Thomas. Series: Loyola topics in political philosophy. Num Pages: 234 pages. BIC Classification: 1KBB; 3JF; DSBD; HBJK; HPCD; JPF. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational; (UP) Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly; (UU) Undergraduate. Dimension: 230 x 153 x 15. Weight in Grams: 381.
With the equality and liberty of the Declaration of Independence as his fighting words, Thomas Jefferson created American democracy. For the two hundred years since then, he has been studied and debated worldwide, but never more intensely than in recent years. His extensive and influential understanding of democracy’s foundation in reason and nature continue to make him one of the most examined American founders. Thomas Jefferson and the Politics of Nature is a collection of the very best current scholarship devoted to Thomas Jefferson as politician, writer, philosopher, Christian, and economist.
Lead essayist Michael Zuckert presents his comprehensive interpretation of ... Read moreJefferson’s political thought, which Zuckert considers the best theoretical approach to democracy. While Zuckert moderates Jefferson’s natural rights philosophy with a Kantian perspective, Jean Yarbrough responds with the argument that Jefferson incorporates the authors of the Scottish Enlightenment and principles from the Republican tradition to achieve the same moderating effect.
Garrett Ward Sheldon looks at the broader cultural influences shaping Jefferson’s thought and traces his republicanism to his support of Christian ethics and Aristotle. R. Booth Fowler examines why Jefferson, the leading liberal theorist of the nineteenth century, became the hero of the very different liberalism of the twentieth. Robert Dawidoff considers Jefferson as writer and literary figure instead of political thinker and actor, while Joyce Appleby renews an appreciation of Jefferson's statecraft by a famous reexamination of his commercial agrarian policy. Finally, James Ceaser traces Jefferson’s belief in racial inferiority to a speculative new natural science prominent among contemporary European thinkers and argues that Jefferson committed a significant error in reducing politics to such conjectural “facts.”
This compact text is ideal for professors wishing to offer a one-volume collection of current Jeffersonian scholarship to undergraduate students. Professors and students alike will find that the essays contain prompt, focused, substantive discussions on the key issues facing Jeffersonian scholars. This handy collection will be an invaluable classroom tool for those studying not only Jefferson but also history, political philosophy, and science, as well as the history of ideas.
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Product Details
Publisher
University of Notre Dame Press
Series
Loyola topics in political philosophy
Place of Publication
Notre Dame IN, United States
Shipping Time
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About Thomas Engeman
Thomas Engeman is Associate Professor of Political Science at Loyola University, Chicago, and Director of the Frank M. Covey, Jr., Loyola Lectures in Political Analysis. Contributors: Michael P. Zuckert, Jean Yarbrough, Garrett Ward Sheldon, Robert Dawidoff, Robert Booth Fowler, Joyce Appleby, James W. Ceaser
Reviews for Thomas Jefferson and the Politics of Nature (FRANK COVEY LOYOLA L)
“A symposium in print illuminating the soul of the American political tradition, Thomas Jefferson and the Politics of Nature brings a group of outstanding Jefferson scholars to explore, test and supplement Michael Zuckert's well-argued defense of Jefferson and the natural rights republic that his thought inspired. And Zuckert responds!” —Walter Nicgorski, Editor, The Review of Politics “Thomas Jefferson and the ... Read morePolitics of Nature is a lively and illuminating symposium on the most perplexing and fascinating of the founding fathers. These essays demonstrate why Jefferson now, as in the past, and as in the future, will engage the most thoughtful and talented of philosophic scholars.” —Harry Jaffa, Professor of Government, Claremont McKenna College “This volume brings together major new Jeffersonian studies by some of the greatest living Jefferson scholars. The collection is distinguished by its unity of focus, the high level of the discussion, and the lucidity and attractiveness of the writing.” —Thomas Pangle, Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada “Thomas Engeman has assembled a model symposium that amounts to a comprehensive treatment of Jefferson as a thinker and writer, in a lively exchange between ranking scholars that is both learned and readable. It will be invaluable for students of American political thought and history.”—Wilson Carey McWilliams, Professor of Political Science, Rutgers Show Less