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9780826450470

Liberalism and Value Pluralism

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780826450470

  • ISBN10:

    0826450474

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2002-04-30
  • Publisher: Continuum
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Summary

Value pluralism is the idea, associated with the late Isaiah Berlin, that fundamental human values are irreducibly plural and incommensurable. Ends like liberty, equality and community are intrinsic goods which can neither be ranked in an absolute hierarchy nor translated into units of a common denominator. If that is true, how can we choose among such values when they come into conflict in particular cases? In particular, what reason is there to justify the value ranking characteristic of liberal democracy, favouring personal autonomy and toleration? Recent commentators have seen value pluralism as undermining the traditional claims of liberalism to universal authority, rendering it at best no more than one political form among others with no greater claim to legitimacy. Against that view, George Crowder argues that a strong distinctive case for liberalism as a universal project is implied by value pluralism itself. Reflection on the elements of value pluralism yields a set of ethical principles, including respect for universal values, rejection of political utopianism, promotion of value diversity, accommodation of reasonable disagreement, and cultivation of civic virtues. Those principles are best satisfied by a liberal form of politics characterised by a strong commitment to personal autonomy, by policies of moderate redistribution and multiculturalism, and by constitutional restraints on democractic politics. This is the first book-length defence of liberalism on the basis of value pluralism, complementing and extending the work of Berlin and others.

Author Biography

George Crowder has taught political philosophy in Britain, the United States, Eastern Europe and Australasia, and is currently Senior Lecturer in Political Theory at Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgements vii
Introduction
1(20)
Part I Liberalism and Value Pluralism
Liberalism and its Justification
21(23)
Value Pluralism
44(34)
Part II Pluralist Arguments: Liberal and Anti-Liberal
From Pluralism to Anti-Utopianism: Berlin's Case
78(25)
Pluralism against Liberalism? Conservatism and Pragmatism
103(32)
Part III From Pluralism to Liberalism
From Pluralism to Liberalism I: Diversity
135(23)
From Pluralism to Liberalism II: Reasonable Disagreement
158(27)
From Pluralism to Liberalism III: Virtues
185(32)
Pluralist Liberalism
217(41)
Conclusion
258(5)
References 263(11)
Index 274

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