ABSTRACT

A sense of order has irreversibly retreated at the turn of the twenty-first century with the rise of such ancient civilizations as China and India and the militant resurgence of Islamic groups. The United States and like-minded states want to maintain the once-dominant international and global order buttressed by a set of mainly Western value systems and institutions. Nevertheless, challengers have sought to redraw the international and global order according to their own ideas and preferences, while selectively accommodating and taking advantage of the established order. Because of this, the entire world is teetering on the brink of an order war.

This book is a synthesis of two separate bodies of thoughts, from Western and East Asian ideas and philosophies respectively. The authors deploy the major ideas of key Western and East Asian thinkers to shed a new light on their usefulness in understanding the transition of global order. They locate new ideas to overcome the contradictions of the late modern world and provide some ideational building blocks of a new global order. The new concepts proposed are: recognition between the great civilizations; a harmony and floating balance between and within contrasts—individual versus community, freedom versus equality—;and mediation between friends and foes. As the former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin put it, "you don’t need to make peace with your friends, you have to make peace with your foes." The values of the West as well as that of the East cannot survive in a globalized world by taking them as absolute, but only by balancing them to those of the other great civilizations of the world.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

The birth pains of a new global order

part I|56 pages

The order war

chapter 1|22 pages

The order wars in the twenty-first century

chapter 2|14 pages

Between Lyotard and Hegel

Beyond Kant and the binary logic

chapter 3|18 pages

The end of Western modernity?

part II|46 pages

Floating balance

chapter 5|21 pages

Clausewitz, polarity, and a different dialectics

A new beginning

part III|46 pages

Harmony

part IV|54 pages

Recognition

chapter 8|19 pages

Marx’s reversal of Hegel

chapter 9|17 pages

Between Clausewitz and Hegel

Revitalizing the struggle for recognition

chapter 10|16 pages

Between Carl Schmitt and Hannah Arendt

Mediation between friends and foes

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue

Sharing power in a new global order