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  1. Political Theory and the Conduct of Faith: Oakeshott on Religion in Public Life.Lucas Swaine - 2005 - Contemporary Political Theory 4 (1):63-82.
    This article examines Michael Oakeshott's peculiar understanding of religion and its connection to politics and public affairs in democratic societies. It considers Oakeshott's views on both the prominence of religion as an expression of practical life, and the conciliatory role of the religious imagination in human existence. Upon inspection, Oakeshott's notion of a reconciled form of religiosity appears to be devised to speak to problems of religious enthusiasm in liberal democracies. Oakeshott's response to challenges of religious enthusiasm is insufficient and (...)
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  • Religion and the mode of practice in Michael Oakeshott.Elizabeth Corey - 2009 - Zygon 44 (1):139-151.
    Michael Oakeshott's religious view of the world stands behind much of his political and philosophical writing. In this essay I first discuss Oakeshott's view of religion and the mode of practice in his own terms. I attempt next to illuminate his idea of religion by describing it in less technical language, drawing upon other thinkers such as Georg Simmel and George Santayana, who share similar views. I then evaluate Oakeshott's view as a whole, considering whether his ideas about religion can (...)
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  • The Individual, The State, and The Common Good.John Haldane - 1996 - Social Philosophy and Policy 13 (1):59.
    Let me begin with what should be a reassuring thought, and one that may serve as a corrective to presumptions that sometimes characterize political philosophy. The possibility, which Aquinas and Madison are both concerned with, of wise and virtuous political deliberation resulting in beneficial and stable civil order, no more depends upon possession of aphilosophical theory of the state and of the virtues proper to it, than does the possibility of making good paintings depend upon possession of an aesthetic theory (...)
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  • Oakeshottian modes at the crossroads of the evolution debates.Corey Abel - 2009 - Zygon 44 (1):197-222.
    I examine Michael Oakeshott's theory of modes of experience in light of today's evolution debates and argue that in much of our current debate science and religion irrelevantly attack each other or, less commonly but still irrelevantly, seek out support from the other. An analysis of Oakeshott's idea of religion finds links between his early holistic theory of the state, his individualistic account of religious sensibility, and his theory of political, moral, and religious authority. Such analysis shows that a modern (...)
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  • In Affirming Them, He Affirms Himself.S. H. Kim - 2000 - Political Theory 28 (2):197-229.
    But with the member of a Nonconforming or self-made religious community, how different! The sectary's eigene grosse Erfindungen, as Goethe calls them,—the precious discoveries of himself and his friends for expressing the inexpressible and defining the undefinable in peculiar forms of their own,—cannot but, as he has voluntarily chosen them and is personally responsible for them, fill his whole mind. He is zealous to do battle for them and affirm them; for in affirming them, he affirms himself, and that is (...)
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  • Themed issue on Oakeshott.Gene Callahan & Leslie Marsh - 2014 - Cosmos + Taxis 1 (3).
    A themed issue on the work of Michael Oakeshott.
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  • Virtue and normalization: Oakeshott, Galston and the problem of a liberal personality.Jacob Segal - 2011 - Contemporary Political Theory 10 (2):190-209.
    This article examines a tension within liberal theory by comparing the ideas of liberal virtue in the political theories of Michael Oakeshott and William Galston. On the one hand, liberal society is pluralistic, that is, individuals are free to pursue a variety of ends and purposes. Liberals also argue that liberalism requires a bond of shared characteristics to sustain social unity. Working through the conceptual paradigm of poststructuralism, I argue that Galston fails to resolve this problem as he constructs a (...)
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  • Instrumentalism, Civil Association and the Ethics of Health Care: Understanding the “Politics of Faith”.Peter R. Sedgwick - 2013 - Health Care Analysis 21 (3):208-223.
    This paper offers critical reflection on the contemporary tendency to approach health care in instrumentalist terms. Instrumentalism is means-ends rationality. In contemporary society, the instrumentalist attitude is exemplified by the relationship between individual consumer and a provider of goods and services. The problematic nature of this attitude is illustrated by Michael Oakeshott’s conceptions of enterprise association and civil association. Enterprise association is instrumental; civil association is association in terms of an ethically delineated realm of practices. The latter offers a richer (...)
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  • Introduction to the symposium.Leslie Marsh - 2009 - Zygon 44 (1):133-137.
    Symposium of Oakeshott on religion, science and politics.
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  • Intimations of Oakeshott: A critical reading of his ‘Notebooks, 1922–86’.David Hexter, Michael Kenny & Luke O’Sullivan - 2019 - European Journal of Political Theory 18 (1):138-149.
    The nature and worth of Michael Oakeshott’s contribution as a political thinker have long been the subject of deep disagreement within the community of Anglophone political theory. This is partly the product of a partial familiarity with Oakeshott’s corpus. During his lifetime, his body of published work had a rather slender appearance, comprising two major monographs, separated by some forty years, and two rather more accessible collections of essays on politics and history. Following his death in 1990, however, a much (...)
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  • High Culture, Low Politics.Robert Grant - 2006 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 58:189-212.
    My theme at its most general is the relation between culture and power; at its most specific, the relation between a particular type of culture, so-called high culture, and two types of power, namely governmental power, and the related but more diffuse power prevailing in society at large.
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  • Is absolute secularity conceivable?Simon During - 2017 - Intellectual History Review 27 (1):151-169.
    This paper critically examines the prospects for thoroughly secular thought. It does so in relation to recent theories of secularization (and especially Charles Taylor’s and Hans Blumenberg’s) as well as by attending to two very different intellectual projects, one mounted by Jeremy Bentham (in particular his concept of felicity or happiness), the other by Michael Oakeshott. It argues that Bentham’s utilitarian account of happiness depends on a Christian conceptual structure, and that Oakeshott’s understanding of philosophy as a practice of questioning (...)
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  • The Aesthetic and Moral Character of Oakeshott’s Educational Writings.Elizabeth Corey - 2013 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 47 (1):86-98.
    This article is an investigation of two apparently contradictory impulses in Oakeshott’s writings about liberal education. On the one hand, he implied that it was primarily ‘aesthetic’, something undertaken for its own sake with no practical consequences. On the other hand, he often implied that a student might undergo a moral transformation in the process of becoming educated. This article attempts to reconcile both these ideas in Oakeshott’s thought, and to show that they are coherent within the German Bildung tradition.
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