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Human Dignity and Contemporary Liberalism by Brad Stetson — book cover

Human Dignity and Contemporary Liberalism

by Brad Stetson
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Overview

The author of Human Dignity and Contemporary Liberalism argues that the nature and application of contemporary liberalism is significantly dissonant with the deepest inclinations and most persistent moral sentiments of human beings, and it therefore distorts human self-understanding and defaces human dignity. This mismatch between human nature and the essence of contemporary liberalism hobbles our public life, and—the author suggests—is the Gordian knot that must be loosed if the new millennium is to manifest a more humane and satisfying American civitas.

This wide-ranging book begins with a discussion of certain consequences and implications of contemporary liberalism's heavy emphasis on individual rights, moving into a reflection on two general categories of human dignity, suggesting that there is in contemporary liberal thought a lack of clarity concerning the meaning and gravity of this concept. The focus then shifts to the idea of desert or deservingness. The viability of desert, rightly understood, is advanced as a useful general concept for understanding American public life, and as an important tool for restoring a measure of common sense to our politics.

The second section of the book concentrates on the actual application of contemporary liberalism's values as it has occurred since the 1960s, particularly in the culturally contentious areas of race and abortion. Emerging from this survey is an unflattering image of a political paradigm which, according to the author, must be abandoned, or at least radically revised, if America is to strike a posture of moral intensity and genuine social understanding.

About the Author, Brad Stetson

BRAD STETSON is Director of Studies at the David Institute.

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Editorials

Booknews

Stetson's (director, David Institute) aim is to make a constructive critique of liberalism focusing on American public life. His argument is divided into two distinct parts, the theoretical and the practical. In the theoretical section, he examines contemporary liberalism's emphasis on individual rights and argues that the force of postmodernism has profoundly degraded the value of human life in contemporary American society. This section also includes a discussion of desert, or deservingness, and the possibility of its use as a tool for restoring a measure of common sense to our politics. In the practical part of the book he concentrates on the actual operation of liberalism's values since the 1960s, particularly in the areas of race and abortion. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
January 30, 1998
Publisher
Greenwood Press
Pages
200
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780275946258

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