Thomas E. Mann and Norman J. Ornstein's new book about the dysfunctional state of American government, It's Even Worse Than It Looks, has been getting a lot of press lately. I haven't read it yet, but I have been struck by a word in the book's subtitle -- "How the American Constitutional System Collided with the New Politics of Extremism" -- that, based on reviews and Mann and Ornstein's own summaries of their argument, plays an important role in their diagnosis.
As the subtitle suggests, "extremism" is very much the villain in Mann and Ornstein's story about American politics. Mann and Ornstein use "extremism" to describe today's Republican Party.* They write that the contemporary GOP is "ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; unmoved by conventional understanding of facts, evidence and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition."
Though I agree with much of Mann and Ornstein's argument about the failure of our constitutional system, the analytical category of "extremism" seems very problematic to me.
"Extremism" is an old hot-button word in American politics. It is almost entirely a pejorative. And it has two related, often blurred meanings: it can be a description of an ideology, but it can also be a description of political tactics. Indeed, it very often implies both while fudging the distinction between the two. I don't know how Mann and Ornstein finesse the relationship between ideology and political tactics in the book-length version of their argument. In their summaries of it, the two are treated as almost entirely the same thing. The authors use "extremism" explicitly to describe the GOP's ideology, but that ideology essentially entails a set of political tactics, which are, in a sense, the real focus of Mann and Ornstein's concern.
The word "extremism" is, of course, a spatial metaphor. Ideologically speaking a view is "extremist" based on its distance from some (purported) ideological center. Tactically, a political behavior is "extremist" if it doesn't conform with some sense of moderation. By the beginning of the Cold War, the notion that real political answers were to be found in the vital center had become a key component of U.S. liberalism. Opponents to both the left and the right could be labeled "extremist," a term that suggested that the accused was dangerously close to the truly far right or far left, fascism or communism.
When critics labelled Barry Goldwater an extremist in 1964, the newly crowned GOP candidate, to the great surprise of the media, became one of the few modern U.S. political actors to embrace the term:
Goldwater's declaration about "extremism in the defense of liberty" and "moderation in the pursuit of justice" became the most famous line from his convention address.** Clearly Goldwater was embracing the notion of extremism in tactics. Indeed, the speech attempts to connect the idea of extremism to two things that are conventionally seen as core aspects of the dominant U.S. ideology: liberty and justice. But despite its fame, Goldwater's attempt to domesticate the rhetoric of extremism failed miserably. While many elements of Goldwater's campaign survived his spectacular defeat and became key elements of much more successful conservative campaigns in the future, the word "extremism" remained a pejorative in mainstream politics (though some activists on the right would occasionally lay claim to it in Goldwater fashion). This year's presumptive Republican nominee accuses the President of "environmental extremism"; he never embraces the term as a description of himself.
The largely pejorative nature of "extremism" and the slippery relationship between its ideological and tactical referents are two reasons that I am suspicious of it as an analytic term. But there's a more specific reason that I am bothered by Mann and Ornstein's usage of it. To the extent that "extremism" has an objective meaning, it is relational: an extremist view is far from the center, outside the mainstream.
Whatever else you can say about today's Republican Party, it is, for better or for worse, not outside of the mainstream. It remains very competitive in national elections. It won the 2010 midterms pretty resoundingly. Though a slender majority of the public views the Republican Party unfavorably, a very substantial minority--forty percent--have a favorable view of it. I have a hard time calling a view held by forty percent of the public far from the mainstream. And, indeed, when it comes to policy positions on many major issues, the distance between the two parties is not nearly so great as the level of partisan hostility would suggest.
So "extremism" seems to me to be an imprecise and lazy way to describe the problem about which Mann and Ornstein are writing (a problem the existence of which I absolutely acknowledge). Not only does it not accurately describe the relationship of the current Republican Party to the current mainstream of American politics, but it also at least implicitly rests on the notion that the answers to our political problems can always be found in the political center. Without in any way embracing the substance of Barry Goldwater's political vision, I would have to agree with him that extremism is not always a political vice (though I'd like to think that I'd have the good sense not to say as much on the stump).
____________________________________________
* One of the authors' main points is that we need to move beyond the journalistic tendency to want to present the two major parties as essentially similar, mirror images of each other. Although as I note above I have some problems with the way they characterize the Republican Party, I am entirely in sympathy with the view that the conventional desire to see the two parties as similar to each other is deeply wrongheaded and interferes with understanding American politics.
** They are said to have been penned by Harry Jaffa, one of Leo Strauss's first students and a consultant to the Goldwater campaign, though they certainly do not represent a particularly Straussian sentiment.
Tampilkan postingan dengan label American Political Thought. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label American Political Thought. Tampilkan semua postingan
Senin, 07 Mei 2012
Selasa, 24 April 2012
USIH PSAs
Dear Readers: A few public service announcements that might be of interest to U.S. intellectual historians.
1) American Political Thought. A new journal from the University of Chicago Press. Thanks to Mike O'Connor for notifying me of this development. As Mike wrote to me: "The inaugural issue includes a roundtable on American Exceptionalism, featuring, among others, Rogers Smith. This issue also features reviews of books by Pauline Maier and John Patrick Diggins, and an article on Benjamin Franklin. It's indexed on JSTOR, where they've put up a bit of free content (see the link above)."
2) Jacobin. As regular readers here know by now, I'm a tireless advocate of this upstart leftist journal of ideas. The latest issue is now out, and several of the articles can be read for free online. The issue is excellent. I am particularly impressed by articles by my Illinois State University colleague Curtis White, "The Philanthropic Complex," and by the next great educational writer, Megan Erickson, "The Case for Cinderblocks." Also be sure to read the excellent review of Jim Livingston's Against Thrift by Tim Barker.
3) Routledge Handbook of Cosmopolitan Studies. (Shameless self promotion alert.) This large anthology is now published--it's expensive, so you might recommend it to your institutional libraries. It includes my chapter, "Americans and Others: Historical Identity Formation in the United States."
4) Ideas in History. This Nordic journal of intellectual history is issuing a CFP for a special theme issue on the history of economic ideas. Check it out: Since the 1980s, the economic landscape of the world has changed dramatically: globalisation, finanzialisation and deindustrialisation, rapid growth of global and national economic inequality, and repeated financial crises. Although the world has changed, intellectual historians have yet to seize the opportunity of offering historical in-depth understandings of the changes of global capitalism, then and now. This, we argue, should indeed be possible, and this special issue of Ideas in History calls for an economic turn’ of the discipline of intellectual history. We are interested in work that investigates the moral and cultural histories of economic rationalities and practice; work that traces the ways in which modern economic rationality became natural, and the ways in which it had to struggle (or collaborate) with religious and scientific authorities in order to gain legitimacy. Studies might concern various economic topics and practices, such as finance, poverty, markets, the state, regulation debates, statistics, money, insurance, etc., but it should investigate these from a perspective and/or methodology that can clearly be identified as affiliated with the discipline of intellectual history. Indeed, economic practices and rationalities offer great opportunities for being studied as representation, discourse, rhetoric, ideology, signs, symbols, etc., instead of merely being cold-hearted facts, graphs, figures, laws or objective truths that are not mediated through culture. Periodically, we are interested in the early modern period (with the rise of e.g. double-entry bookkeeping and of merchant capitalism in e.g. Venice), in the modern enlightenment period, and in the contemporary world. We are particularly interested in studies that investigate the moral and political controversies surrounding economic practices, and the role that religion and science, especially natural science, have played in these. Readings of work that deal with greater cultural and intellectual changes in the context of economic practices will be preferred over ‘great text’ readings. Reflections on whether the language of economics and economic values has today become a ‘master discourse’, stronger than both truth (science) and faith (religion) are highly welcome, as well as reflections on whether economic discourses are still haunted/supported by religious and/or scientific beliefs. Deadline for article submission is October 1st 2012.
Ideas in History is a double-blind peer reviewed journal. Pieces should generally be 8-12,000 words long. Pieces will be received by the journal editors. Upon approval by the editorial board, pieces will then be sent for blind peer review. Ideas in History uses the Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed., author-date system for references. Ideas in History subscribes to the principle of global English; manuscripts may be submitted in any self-consistent national form of English as concerns spelling, grammar and syntax. For placement of quotation marks, spellings of dates, capitalization conventions, placement of references, page numbering conventions and the compilation of the reference list, authors are referred to the Chicago Manual. The reference list should be labeled "References". Manuscripts should be submitted in Times New Roman 12. Footnotes, when necessary, should be used instead of endnotes and be formatted in Times New Roman 10. Manuscripts should be line spaced at either 1.5 or 2.0. Articles should be sent to Mikkel Thorup (idemt@hum.au.dk) or Christian Olaf Christiansen (idecoc@hum.au.dk).
1) American Political Thought. A new journal from the University of Chicago Press. Thanks to Mike O'Connor for notifying me of this development. As Mike wrote to me: "The inaugural issue includes a roundtable on American Exceptionalism, featuring, among others, Rogers Smith. This issue also features reviews of books by Pauline Maier and John Patrick Diggins, and an article on Benjamin Franklin. It's indexed on JSTOR, where they've put up a bit of free content (see the link above)."
2) Jacobin. As regular readers here know by now, I'm a tireless advocate of this upstart leftist journal of ideas. The latest issue is now out, and several of the articles can be read for free online. The issue is excellent. I am particularly impressed by articles by my Illinois State University colleague Curtis White, "The Philanthropic Complex," and by the next great educational writer, Megan Erickson, "The Case for Cinderblocks." Also be sure to read the excellent review of Jim Livingston's Against Thrift by Tim Barker.
3) Routledge Handbook of Cosmopolitan Studies. (Shameless self promotion alert.) This large anthology is now published--it's expensive, so you might recommend it to your institutional libraries. It includes my chapter, "Americans and Others: Historical Identity Formation in the United States."
4) Ideas in History. This Nordic journal of intellectual history is issuing a CFP for a special theme issue on the history of economic ideas. Check it out: Since the 1980s, the economic landscape of the world has changed dramatically: globalisation, finanzialisation and deindustrialisation, rapid growth of global and national economic inequality, and repeated financial crises. Although the world has changed, intellectual historians have yet to seize the opportunity of offering historical in-depth understandings of the changes of global capitalism, then and now. This, we argue, should indeed be possible, and this special issue of Ideas in History calls for an economic turn’ of the discipline of intellectual history. We are interested in work that investigates the moral and cultural histories of economic rationalities and practice; work that traces the ways in which modern economic rationality became natural, and the ways in which it had to struggle (or collaborate) with religious and scientific authorities in order to gain legitimacy. Studies might concern various economic topics and practices, such as finance, poverty, markets, the state, regulation debates, statistics, money, insurance, etc., but it should investigate these from a perspective and/or methodology that can clearly be identified as affiliated with the discipline of intellectual history. Indeed, economic practices and rationalities offer great opportunities for being studied as representation, discourse, rhetoric, ideology, signs, symbols, etc., instead of merely being cold-hearted facts, graphs, figures, laws or objective truths that are not mediated through culture. Periodically, we are interested in the early modern period (with the rise of e.g. double-entry bookkeeping and of merchant capitalism in e.g. Venice), in the modern enlightenment period, and in the contemporary world. We are particularly interested in studies that investigate the moral and political controversies surrounding economic practices, and the role that religion and science, especially natural science, have played in these. Readings of work that deal with greater cultural and intellectual changes in the context of economic practices will be preferred over ‘great text’ readings. Reflections on whether the language of economics and economic values has today become a ‘master discourse’, stronger than both truth (science) and faith (religion) are highly welcome, as well as reflections on whether economic discourses are still haunted/supported by religious and/or scientific beliefs. Deadline for article submission is October 1st 2012.
Ideas in History is a double-blind peer reviewed journal. Pieces should generally be 8-12,000 words long. Pieces will be received by the journal editors. Upon approval by the editorial board, pieces will then be sent for blind peer review. Ideas in History uses the Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed., author-date system for references. Ideas in History subscribes to the principle of global English; manuscripts may be submitted in any self-consistent national form of English as concerns spelling, grammar and syntax. For placement of quotation marks, spellings of dates, capitalization conventions, placement of references, page numbering conventions and the compilation of the reference list, authors are referred to the Chicago Manual. The reference list should be labeled "References". Manuscripts should be submitted in Times New Roman 12. Footnotes, when necessary, should be used instead of endnotes and be formatted in Times New Roman 10. Manuscripts should be line spaced at either 1.5 or 2.0. Articles should be sent to Mikkel Thorup (idemt@hum.au.dk) or Christian Olaf Christiansen (idecoc@hum.au.dk).
Kamis, 19 Januari 2012
George Kateb's Place In The History Of Political Philosophy
In the course of researching the reviews of Mortimer J. Adler's 1970s books, I ran across one by George Kateb. At the time he was a junior faculty member at Amherst College*, but is now an emeritus professor at Princeton University. I don't know anything about Kateb's reputation among political philosophers, but his Wikipedia entry (or "Professor Wikipedia," in Bill Fine's words) calls him a "staunch individualist" and relays that "Kateb, along with John Rawls and Isaiah Berlin, is credited with making significant contributions to liberal political theory." Heady company. Suffice it to say that he is a champion for liberalism.
Here are the books authored by him alone:
- Utopia and Its Enemies. New York and London: Free Press, l963. Reprinted with a new Preface, New York: Schocken, l972.
- Political Theory: Its Nature and Uses. New York: St Martin's Press, l968.
- Hannah Arendt: Politics, Conscience, Evil. Totowa, N.J. and London: Rowman and Allanheld, l984.
- The Inner Ocean: Individualism and Democratic Culture. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1992.
- Emerson and Self-Reliance. Sage, 1994. 2d edition, with a new Preface, New York: Rowman and Littlefield, 2002.
- Patriotism and Other Mistakes. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006.
The topics that are the objects of these books arise in predictable spots when one searches the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy online. This at least affirms something of Kateb's authority, or usefulness.
What do you know about Kateb? Where does he appear in USIH historiography? I haven't found him in any recent intellectual histories. So how can he really be on par with Rawls and Berlin in terms of contributions to political philosophy? What is Kateb's place in the history of American political philosophy? Who _is_ George Kateb?
Not that this answers any of my questions, but Kateb has made an appearance at the NYT philosophy blog, The Stone (the link takes you to a video interview--here's a transcripted excerpt). There Kateb characterizes himself "as an oncologist or pathologist of politics." To that point, his Wikipedia page adds: "More recently Kateb has turned his attention to what he sees as the increasing erosion of individual liberty wrought by the Bush administration and the poisonous influence of religious, ethnic and statist group identity on morality." Most interesting.
My inclination is to put him in the camp of non-analytic political philosophers whose works support a kind of secular libertarianism. But he also appears to have some sense of community responsibility. So perhaps he is simply a paragon of the individualist strain in mid-century liberalism. Thoughts? Let's see if we can build some kind of historiography in relation to his thought in the comments. - TL
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*Kateb was interviewed by Amherst professor William Taubman in 2008.
Kamis, 20 Oktober 2011
Tim's Light Reading (10-20-2011): War Powers, Catholicism, OWS, Academostars, and More
Relaying these bits and pieces to you while celebrating my spouse's birthday. Happy birthday, Jodi!
1. Contingency in Intellectual History (i.e. Political Philosophy)
At the Legal History Blog, Mary Dudziak points us to a new piece by Tulane University Law School Stephen Griffin's titled "Reconceiving the War Powers Debate." The basis for this discussion, as Professor Dudziak sees it (in relation to her own work), is this passage from Michael Hogan's Cross of Iron:
The most important aspect of the postwar constitutional order, one with subtle, far-reaching and long-lasting effects, was the gradual erasure of the difference between wartime and peacetime. Because all foreign wars prior to 1950 had been authorized by Congress, the prewar constitutional order featured a sharp distinction between the powers of government in war and peace. As Hogan demonstrates, the early Cold War featured a massive effort to convince the President, Congress and the public that this distinction no longer made sense.
2. Nominations Are In For The Category "America's Greatest Catholic Intellectual"
Where, you ask? Benedictine College's Gregorian Institute has a blog, and at that blog they have reported on survey wherein the Institute asked "top Catholic commentators, editors and scholars" about "America's Greatest Catholic Intellectuals." The Institute is trying to create an "online Catholic Hall of Fame." Here's their tentative nomination list:
1. Orestes Brownson (1803–1876) [right]
2. John Courtney Murray (1904-1967)
3. John Senior (1923-1999)
4. Avery Dulles (1918-2008)
5. James Schall (1928-)
6. Ralph McInerny (1929-2010)
7. Richard John Neuhaus (1936-2009)
8. Mary Anne Glendon (1938-)
9. George Weigel (1951-)
10. Robert P. George (1955-)
Where's John Tracy Ellis? Fulton Sheen? Where are Peter Maurin and Dorothy Day? And why do we need an intellectual star system anyway?
3. Academostars
I'd be happy to talk about Frank Donoghue's link (from immediately above) on its own merits. Here's a flavor of its content (bolds mine):
“Academostars” is a term coined by Jeffrey Williams, who edited an edition of the minnesota review on that topic in 2001. In that issue, Williams offers both a critique and a complement to David Shumway’s PMLA article, “The Star System in Literary Studies.” It’s entitled, “Name Recognition,” avoiding Shumway’s key terms.
...Williams offers one very useful qualification of Shumway’s thesis—that the star system migrated into academia sometime during the heyday of theory in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It did, Williams seems to acknowledge, and there are stars out there of the magnitude of Spivak, Butler, Zizek, and Fish. ...He [Williams] argues that “there are various declensions or quantum levels of stardom, ranging from who is a star in one’s department; of a specialization within a subfield (the star of 18th-century c. French furniture, as I heard a colleague called, which makes me wonder how many other people are in the field),” etc. “At the other end of the spectrum, one aspires to be the star of one’s graduate program, or of the job pool in a particular field. Hiring committees, especially at research universities, look for potential stars.” I could add that the rhetoric of stardom is thrown around, often recklessly at tenure meetings—the best way to make a pitch for a promising tenure candidate is to describe that person as a “rising star.”
My hope is that hiring committees with my name in front of them will be operating on a "Moneyball" thesis and see me as a market inefficiency to be exploited.
4.a. The Intellectual Roots of OWS
The Chronicle's Dan Berrett explores those roots. Aside from discussing the appearances of "academostars" at Zuccotti Park, here's Berrett's provocative thesis:
Occupy Wall Street's most defining characteristics—its decentralized nature and its intensive process of participatory, consensus-based decision-making—are rooted in other precincts of academe and activism: in the scholarship of anarchism and, specifically, in an ethnography of central Madagascar. It was on this island nation off the coast of Africa that David Graeber, one of the movement's early organizers, who has been called one of its main intellectual sources, spent 20 months between 1989 and 1991. He studied the people of Betafo, a community of descendants of nobles and of slaves, for his 2007 book, Lost People. ...He transplanted the lessons he learned in Madagascar to the globalism protests in the late 1990s in which he participated, and which some scholars say are the clearest antecedent, in spirit, to Occupy Wall Street.
It's a great article even if you find the thesis off-putting. Let's discuss. [BTW #1: Here are some statistics that inform the direction of OWS. #2: Here's a bit about the relationship between Catholic identity and OWS]
4.b. OWS Signals the Unity of the Creative and Working Classes
John Russo, from the Center for Working-Class Studies, writes that OWS represents the falsification of Richard Florida's ten-year old thesis that the interests of the "creative class" are more important than, or different from, those of the working classes. In other words, the creative class is subject to the same dislocations and whimsical desires of financiers who prioritize profit over national solidarity.
5. The Cost of Certainty About Falsehoods
Axiom from William James: "There is truth-pursuit and error-avoidance. We don't want to have one without the other."
With that, Baylor University's Alexander Pruss speculates, or argues rather, the following:
Given some very plausible assumptions on epistemic utilities, one can prove that one needs to set more than 2.588 times (more precisely: at least 1/(log 4 − 1) times) as great a disvalue on being certain of a falsehood as the value one sets on being certain of a truth!
...Something to ponder. - TL
1. Contingency in Intellectual History (i.e. Political Philosophy)
At the Legal History Blog, Mary Dudziak points us to a new piece by Tulane University Law School Stephen Griffin's titled "Reconceiving the War Powers Debate." The basis for this discussion, as Professor Dudziak sees it (in relation to her own work), is this passage from Michael Hogan's Cross of Iron:
The most important aspect of the postwar constitutional order, one with subtle, far-reaching and long-lasting effects, was the gradual erasure of the difference between wartime and peacetime. Because all foreign wars prior to 1950 had been authorized by Congress, the prewar constitutional order featured a sharp distinction between the powers of government in war and peace. As Hogan demonstrates, the early Cold War featured a massive effort to convince the President, Congress and the public that this distinction no longer made sense.2. Nominations Are In For The Category "America's Greatest Catholic Intellectual"
Where, you ask? Benedictine College's Gregorian Institute has a blog, and at that blog they have reported on survey wherein the Institute asked "top Catholic commentators, editors and scholars" about "America's Greatest Catholic Intellectuals." The Institute is trying to create an "online Catholic Hall of Fame." Here's their tentative nomination list:
1. Orestes Brownson (1803–1876) [right]2. John Courtney Murray (1904-1967)
3. John Senior (1923-1999)
4. Avery Dulles (1918-2008)
5. James Schall (1928-)
6. Ralph McInerny (1929-2010)
7. Richard John Neuhaus (1936-2009)
8. Mary Anne Glendon (1938-)
9. George Weigel (1951-)
10. Robert P. George (1955-)
Where's John Tracy Ellis? Fulton Sheen? Where are Peter Maurin and Dorothy Day? And why do we need an intellectual star system anyway?
3. Academostars
I'd be happy to talk about Frank Donoghue's link (from immediately above) on its own merits. Here's a flavor of its content (bolds mine):
“Academostars” is a term coined by Jeffrey Williams, who edited an edition of the minnesota review on that topic in 2001. In that issue, Williams offers both a critique and a complement to David Shumway’s PMLA article, “The Star System in Literary Studies.” It’s entitled, “Name Recognition,” avoiding Shumway’s key terms.
...Williams offers one very useful qualification of Shumway’s thesis—that the star system migrated into academia sometime during the heyday of theory in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It did, Williams seems to acknowledge, and there are stars out there of the magnitude of Spivak, Butler, Zizek, and Fish. ...He [Williams] argues that “there are various declensions or quantum levels of stardom, ranging from who is a star in one’s department; of a specialization within a subfield (the star of 18th-century c. French furniture, as I heard a colleague called, which makes me wonder how many other people are in the field),” etc. “At the other end of the spectrum, one aspires to be the star of one’s graduate program, or of the job pool in a particular field. Hiring committees, especially at research universities, look for potential stars.” I could add that the rhetoric of stardom is thrown around, often recklessly at tenure meetings—the best way to make a pitch for a promising tenure candidate is to describe that person as a “rising star.”My hope is that hiring committees with my name in front of them will be operating on a "Moneyball" thesis and see me as a market inefficiency to be exploited.
4.a. The Intellectual Roots of OWS
The Chronicle's Dan Berrett explores those roots. Aside from discussing the appearances of "academostars" at Zuccotti Park, here's Berrett's provocative thesis:
Occupy Wall Street's most defining characteristics—its decentralized nature and its intensive process of participatory, consensus-based decision-making—are rooted in other precincts of academe and activism: in the scholarship of anarchism and, specifically, in an ethnography of central Madagascar. It was on this island nation off the coast of Africa that David Graeber, one of the movement's early organizers, who has been called one of its main intellectual sources, spent 20 months between 1989 and 1991. He studied the people of Betafo, a community of descendants of nobles and of slaves, for his 2007 book, Lost People. ...He transplanted the lessons he learned in Madagascar to the globalism protests in the late 1990s in which he participated, and which some scholars say are the clearest antecedent, in spirit, to Occupy Wall Street.It's a great article even if you find the thesis off-putting. Let's discuss. [BTW #1: Here are some statistics that inform the direction of OWS. #2: Here's a bit about the relationship between Catholic identity and OWS]
4.b. OWS Signals the Unity of the Creative and Working Classes
John Russo, from the Center for Working-Class Studies, writes that OWS represents the falsification of Richard Florida's ten-year old thesis that the interests of the "creative class" are more important than, or different from, those of the working classes. In other words, the creative class is subject to the same dislocations and whimsical desires of financiers who prioritize profit over national solidarity.
5. The Cost of Certainty About Falsehoods
Axiom from William James: "There is truth-pursuit and error-avoidance. We don't want to have one without the other."
With that, Baylor University's Alexander Pruss speculates, or argues rather, the following:Given some very plausible assumptions on epistemic utilities, one can prove that one needs to set more than 2.588 times (more precisely: at least 1/(log 4 − 1) times) as great a disvalue on being certain of a falsehood as the value one sets on being certain of a truth!
...Something to ponder. - TL
Kamis, 13 Oktober 2011
New Journal Announcement: American Political Thought (APT)
[FYI: This has made the H-Net rounds, but I think it needs an underscore for readers of this site. It is clearly a publication meant to be friendly to USIH practitioners. Bolds, hyperlinks, and italics are mine- TL]
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New Journal from the University of Chicago Press: American Political Thought: A Journal of Ideas, Institutions, and Culture
The University of Chicago Press, the University of Notre Dame's Program in Constitutional Studies, and the Jack Miller Center are pleased to announce the launch of the only peer-reviewed academic journal exclusively devoted to the study of American political thought.
American Political Thought: A Journal of Ideas, Institutions, and Culture is now accepting submissions and will publish its inaugural issue in spring 2012. For subscription information and complete submission guidelines, go the journal's homepage.
The new journal will feature research by political scientists, historians, literary scholars, economists, and philosophers who study the texts, authors, and ideas at the foundation of the American political tradition. Research will explore key political concepts such as democracy, constitutionalism, equality, liberty, citizenship, political identity, and the role of the state.
Professor Michael Zuckert, director of Notre Dame's Program in Constitutional Studies, will serve as the journal's first editor.
"Our goal is to create the essential and defining journal for the field," Dr. Zuckert said. "It will be a forum for analysis as well as critique of American political thinking from multiple disciplines and perspectives."
"The new journal will be a natural complement to the new related group within the American Political Science Association dedicated to American political thought," said Dr. Rafael Major, director of faculty development at the Jack Miller Center, a national nonprofit, nonpartisan education foundation. "Both new endeavors have already generated a strong response from both junior and senior scholars seeking an outlet for their research."
"We're very pleased to add American Political Thought to our roster," said Everett Conner, manager of the University of Chicago Press Journals Division. "It will not only be a fine complement to our history and law titles, but also open new ground for the Press in serving scholars of American politics."
APT will publish twice a year in print and online, and will include book reviews along with major articles accepted through a double blind peer-review process.
The journal is now accepting submissions on all areas of relevance including:
*Description, justification, and criticism of the institutions of constitutional democracy in the United States.
*The plurality of first principles called upon to ground these institutions and to orient political action.
*The mentality of the American people, either taken as a whole or as members of various subcultures within the polity.
*Political literature, which has sought to bring political principles to full, imaginative life.
*The ideas around which have been built the platforms of the various political parties in American political history and around which coalesce partisan coalitions today.
*The character of the United States as it presents itself on the world stage and thus in the eyes of those who live abroad.
To submit a manuscript for consideration, please send an electronic file (formatted in Microsoft Word) via the American Political Thought online submission system here. For more information on the submission process, please visit here.
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And here's the editorial staff---notice the names who are both known among USIH folks and are friendly to related topics:
EDITORIAL BOARD
Editor: Michael Zuckert
Managing Editor: S. Adam Seagrave
Editorial Board
W.B. Allen, Michigan State University
Joyce Appleby, University of California, Los Angeles
Benjamin Barber, Rutgers University
Mark Bauerlein, Emory University
Paul Cantor, University of Virginia
James Ceaser, University of Virginia
Jonathan Clark, University of Kansas
Patrick Deneen, Georgetown University
Max Edling, Uppsala Universitet
Jean Elshtain, University of Chicago
Robert Ferguson, Columbia University
Robert P. George, Princeton University
Daniel Howe, University of California, Los Angeles
Harvey Klehr, Emory University
Robert Koons, University of Texas
Harvey Mansfield, Harvard University
Wilfred McClay, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga
Walter McDougall, University of Pennsylvania
Pauline Maier, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Lucas Morel, Washington and Lee University
Peter Onuf, University of Virginia
Karen Orren, University of California, Los Angeles
Rogers Smith, University of Pennsylvania
Steven Smith, Notre Dame University
Eric Sundquist, University of California, Los Angeles
Keith Whittington, Princeton University
Gordon Wood, Brown University
David Wootton, University of York
Jean Yarbrough, Bowdoin College
Donald Yerxa, Eastern Nazarene College
---------------------------------------------------
New Journal from the University of Chicago Press: American Political Thought: A Journal of Ideas, Institutions, and CultureThe University of Chicago Press, the University of Notre Dame's Program in Constitutional Studies, and the Jack Miller Center are pleased to announce the launch of the only peer-reviewed academic journal exclusively devoted to the study of American political thought.
American Political Thought: A Journal of Ideas, Institutions, and Culture is now accepting submissions and will publish its inaugural issue in spring 2012. For subscription information and complete submission guidelines, go the journal's homepage.
The new journal will feature research by political scientists, historians, literary scholars, economists, and philosophers who study the texts, authors, and ideas at the foundation of the American political tradition. Research will explore key political concepts such as democracy, constitutionalism, equality, liberty, citizenship, political identity, and the role of the state.
Professor Michael Zuckert, director of Notre Dame's Program in Constitutional Studies, will serve as the journal's first editor.
"Our goal is to create the essential and defining journal for the field," Dr. Zuckert said. "It will be a forum for analysis as well as critique of American political thinking from multiple disciplines and perspectives."
"The new journal will be a natural complement to the new related group within the American Political Science Association dedicated to American political thought," said Dr. Rafael Major, director of faculty development at the Jack Miller Center, a national nonprofit, nonpartisan education foundation. "Both new endeavors have already generated a strong response from both junior and senior scholars seeking an outlet for their research."
"We're very pleased to add American Political Thought to our roster," said Everett Conner, manager of the University of Chicago Press Journals Division. "It will not only be a fine complement to our history and law titles, but also open new ground for the Press in serving scholars of American politics."
APT will publish twice a year in print and online, and will include book reviews along with major articles accepted through a double blind peer-review process.
The journal is now accepting submissions on all areas of relevance including:
*Description, justification, and criticism of the institutions of constitutional democracy in the United States.
*The plurality of first principles called upon to ground these institutions and to orient political action.
*The mentality of the American people, either taken as a whole or as members of various subcultures within the polity.
*Political literature, which has sought to bring political principles to full, imaginative life.
*The ideas around which have been built the platforms of the various political parties in American political history and around which coalesce partisan coalitions today.
*The character of the United States as it presents itself on the world stage and thus in the eyes of those who live abroad.
To submit a manuscript for consideration, please send an electronic file (formatted in Microsoft Word) via the American Political Thought online submission system here. For more information on the submission process, please visit here.
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And here's the editorial staff---notice the names who are both known among USIH folks and are friendly to related topics:
EDITORIAL BOARD
Editor: Michael Zuckert
Managing Editor: S. Adam Seagrave
Editorial Board
W.B. Allen, Michigan State University
Joyce Appleby, University of California, Los Angeles
Benjamin Barber, Rutgers University
Mark Bauerlein, Emory University
Paul Cantor, University of Virginia
James Ceaser, University of Virginia
Jonathan Clark, University of Kansas
Patrick Deneen, Georgetown University
Max Edling, Uppsala Universitet
Jean Elshtain, University of Chicago
Robert Ferguson, Columbia University
Robert P. George, Princeton University
Daniel Howe, University of California, Los Angeles
Harvey Klehr, Emory University
Robert Koons, University of Texas
Harvey Mansfield, Harvard University
Wilfred McClay, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga
Walter McDougall, University of Pennsylvania
Pauline Maier, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Lucas Morel, Washington and Lee University
Peter Onuf, University of Virginia
Karen Orren, University of California, Los Angeles
Rogers Smith, University of Pennsylvania
Steven Smith, Notre Dame University
Eric Sundquist, University of California, Los Angeles
Keith Whittington, Princeton University
Gordon Wood, Brown University
David Wootton, University of York
Jean Yarbrough, Bowdoin College
Donald Yerxa, Eastern Nazarene College
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