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      Beyond Liberalism
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      Book

      Beyond Liberalism

      DOI link for Beyond Liberalism

      Beyond Liberalism book

      The Political Thought of F. A. HAYEK & MICHAEL POLANYI

      Beyond Liberalism

      DOI link for Beyond Liberalism

      Beyond Liberalism book

      The Political Thought of F. A. HAYEK & MICHAEL POLANYI
      ByR. T. Allen
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 1998
      eBook Published 31 October 2017
      Pub. Location New York
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351290807
      Pages 266
      eBook ISBN 9781351290807
      Subjects Humanities
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      Allen, R.T. (1998). Beyond Liberalism: The Political Thought of F. A. HAYEK & MICHAEL POLANYI (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351290807

      ABSTRACT

      In Beyond Nihilism, Michael Polanyi argued that a merely "negative" liberty of doing as one pleases so long as one does not impinge upon the equal liberty of others - must and has led to destructive nihilism and a fierce reaction to collectivism. R.T. Allen takes up this argument in Beyond Liberalism, and shows how Polanyi's political philosophy evolved into a more "positive" and distinctly conservative concept of liberty, converging upon the archetypal conservatism of Edmund Burke. Allen examines Polanyi's and F.A. Hayek's thinking with respect to the nature, value, and foundations of liberty.Negative and positive liberties are two sides of one liberty, and Allen believes negative conceptions of liberty are as dangerous as positive ones. He distinguishes among general and abstract definitions of liberty and shows how all, including that of Hayek, ultimately dissolve. According to Allen, only tacit conceptions of liberty, such as those of Burke and Polanyi, prove viable. This is because they rest on concrete tradition. Allen examines how the skeptical, rationalist, and utilitarian philosophies of Ludwig von Mises and Sir Karl Popper fail to support the value of liberty and even proved to be destructive of it. Allen argues that society cannot rely upon the classically liberal notion of contract but rather upon prescriptive and inherited obligations. In turn, this means that citizens have positive, as well as negative, duties to each other and the body politic of which they are part and upon whose support liberty depends.A free society is held together by emotional bonds and the traditions and rituals that sustain them. A free society also presupposes that the individual has inherent value in and for himself. For R.T. Allen, only Christianity, and certainly no modern philosophy, has a conception of the unique individual and his irreplaceable value and of a political order that transcends itself into the moral order. Even Polanyi's liberty is ultimately insufficient, for it gives no inherent value to the person himself but instead to the ideals which he serves. Beyond Liberalism challenges deeply ingrained notions of liberty and its meaning in modern society. It is a call for traditions of self-restraint and justice for their own sakes. This noteworthy volume is an essential addition to the libraries of political scientists, philosophers, and theologians alike.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |14 pages

      Introduction

      part I|68 pages

      The Nature of Liberty

      chapter 1|14 pages

      Berlin and Positive and Negative Liberty

      chapter 2|16 pages

      Aspects and Notions of Liberty

      chapter 3|20 pages

      Hayek and Liberty under Law

      chapter 4|16 pages

      The Tacit Dimensions of Liberty

      part II|86 pages

      The Value of Liberty

      chapter 5|14 pages

      Von Mises’s Sceptical Utilitarianism

      chapter 6|16 pages

      The Open Society and Its Lack of Value

      chapter 7|20 pages

      The Value of the Great Society

      chapter 8|18 pages

      Justice and the Rights of the Individual

      chapter 9|16 pages

      Dedication or Servitude

      part III|76 pages

      The Foundations and Presuppositions of Liberty

      chapter 10|14 pages

      The Limits of Contract and Openness

      chapter 11|16 pages

      Two Models of a Free Society

      chapter 12|14 pages

      The Obligations of a Free Society

      chapter 13|16 pages

      The Emotional Bonds of Society

      chapter 14|14 pages

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