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The Good Society

Science and Society 2 (2):260-262 (1938)

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  1. Critical Realism and Technocracy – RW Sellars’ Radical Philosophy in its Context.M. Chirimuuta - 2024 - Topoi 43 (1):147-160.
    The victory of realism over idealism at the start of the twentieth century, and of scientific realism over logical empiricism and pragmatism in the mid twentieth century, is a striking phenomenon that calls for historical explanation. In this paper I propose an externalist account, looking at the social and political reasons why realism became attractive, rather than considering the internal factors–the merits of the arguments in favour of realism. I look at the agenda of Roy Wood Sellars’ critical realism which (...)
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  • “No hay nada menos libre que el libre mercado”. Intervencionismo liberal y antropogenia en la era del capitalismo postfordista.Julien Canavera - 2022 - Revista de Filosofía (Madrid) 48 (1):21-40.
    El propósito del presente texto es mostrar, a contrapelo de lo que suelen sostener tanto sus detractores como sus abogados, que el neoliberalismo, en su crítica al keynesianismo y al Estado de bienestar, no pretende en absoluto reconducir el laissez-faire promovido por los marginalistas, aunque públicamente no tiene inconveniente en acomodarse de la retórica neoclásica. Antes bien, es consciente de que el libre mercado –por el que aboga– es algo que debe ser instituido y protegido frente a la inercia social; (...)
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  • Political Epistemology, Technocracy, and Political Anthropology: Reply to a Symposium on Power Without Knowledge.Jeffrey Friedman - 2020 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 32 (1):242-367.
    A political epistemology that enables us to determine if political actors are likely to know what they need to know must be rooted in an ontology of the actors and of the human objects of their knowledge; that is, a political anthropology. The political anthropology developed in Power Without Knowledge envisions human beings as creatures whose conscious actions are determined by their interpretations of what seem to them to be relevant circumstances; and whose interpretations are, in turn, determined by webs (...)
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  • The Austrian School of Economics and Ordoliberalism – Socio-Economic Order.Anna Jurczuk, Michał Moszyński & Piotr Pysz - 2019 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 57 (1):105-121.
    The scientific aim of the paper is to juxtapose the views on economic order developed by the leading representatives of two schools of liberal thinking – German ordoliberal Walter Eucken and the Austrian economist Friedrich August von Hayek. The first scholar opted for deliberately constructed competitive economic order, the second one advocates for allowing the social institutions to emerge and evolve spontaneously. The analysis proves the similarity of both theories in regard to the significance of principles of an economic order (...)
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  • Neoliberal fascism? Fascist trends in early neoliberal thought and echoes in the present.Henry Maher - forthcoming - Contemporary Political Theory:1-19.
    This article theorises the contemporary convergence of neoliberal and fascist principles by examining the thought of political actors in the 1930s and 1940s who were active in both neoliberal and fascist organisations. I suggest that a sympathy for fascism formed a minor but significant strand of early neoliberal thought, and that unpacking the logics that led particular thinkers and political actors to believe that fascism was compatible with neoliberalism can shed light on the contemporary political moment. Based on my reading (...)
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  • Neoliberalism and Post-Truth: Expertise and the Market Model.Jan Strassheim - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (6):107-124.
    Contrary to widespread assumptions, post-truth politicians formally adopt a rhetoric of ‘truth’ but turn it against established experts. To explain one central factor behind this destructive strategy and its success with voters, I consider Walter Lippmann and Friedrich Hayek, who from 1922 onwards helped develop and popularize a political rhetoric of ‘truth’ in terms of scientific expertise. In Hayek’s influential version, market economics became the crucial expert field. Consequently, the 2008 financial crisis impacted attitudes towards experts more generally. But even (...)
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  • Sociology as a Quest for a Good Society.Ananta Kumar Giri - 2011 - Journal of Human Values 17 (1):1-22.
    Quest for a good society has a long pedigree in sociological thought and critical reflections. It vibrates with many themes of liberation, morality and justice in classical sociology as pioneered by thinkers such as Marx and Durkheim and themes of decent society and creative society in recent theoretical discourses. The present essay discusses this quest for a good society in contemporary social sciences with a detailed discussion of the work of Robert N. Bellah, the pre-eminent sociologist of our times. It (...)
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  • Acumulación originaria y capitalismo neoliberal. Una posible lectura del Chile post-golpe.Andrea Fagioli - 2018 - Isegoría 59:573-593.
    This paper aims to envisage neoliberal capitalism through the prism of the Marxian notion of «primitive accumulation» and to verify this theoretical framework in contemporary Chile. The first part is an exploration of the actual debate about the notion of primitive accumulation. The second part characterizes neoliberal capitalism as a new form of primitive accumulation. For this I identify an objective pole, which I will call neoliberalism as a form of «dispossession» and a subjective pole, as a part of a (...)
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  • The early origins of neoliberalism: Colloque Walter Lippman (1938) and the Mt Perelin Society (1947).Michael A. Peters - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (14):1574-1581.
    The term ‘neoliberalism’ passed into popular usage among left-wing commentators in the late 1970s as an essentially pejorative short-hand description for free market policies that were developed an...
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  • People are born to struggle: Vladimír Čermák’s vision of democracy.Jiří Baroš - 2024 - Studies in East European Thought 76 (2):157-175.
    During the Czechoslovak normalization era (roughly from the 1970s to the 1980s), the Czech lawyer Vladimír Čermák, who later became a Justice of the newly established Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic after the breakdown of the Communist regime, authored a monumental piece called The Question of Democracy. Although this ambitious work has no equal in the Czech context, no attention has been paid to it in the English-speaking world. The present article aims to fill this gap by analyzing the (...)
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  • Neoliberals’ economic liberalism: A checkered history.Roberto Romani - 2022 - Constellations 29 (3):359-374.
    Constellations, Volume 29, Issue 3, Page 359-374, September 2022.
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  • Decent Society: Utopian Horizon or 'the Way Is the Goal'.Norbert Ebert - 2010 - Thesis Eleven 101 (1):72-80.
    This article explores whether the notion of the decent society as a normative concept is applicable under late modern conditions of normative pluralization and individualization. My argument is that the strength of the concept does not primarily lie in its descriptive value. It is rather a ‘utopian horizon’ against which aspects of societies can be analysed. This analytical value can tell us something about the state of various facets of social life. Having to cope with pluralization, individuals are increasingly required (...)
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