Just Finished Reading: An Introduction to Political
Philosophy by Jonathan Wolff (FP: 2006)
Over the past few months I’ve been working up a head of
steam to get into reading political books. As I recently discussed elsewhere a
mere 6% of my reading is in the field of politics despite having strongly held
opinions on the subject (or maybe because of that very reason – why read books
on a subject where I’ve largely already made up my mind?). Taken together with my utter distaste for
politicians of all persuasions and my recent decision to stop voting for any of
the major political parties my incentive to dive into a politics book has been
pretty low. But, partly prompted by a series of books I’ve stumbled across
which promises some very interesting political commentary and partially by
appreciating that my lack of political depth is a deficiency that needs to be
addressed, I’ve decided to bite the bullet and give it a go.
What better place to start, I thought, than a
broad introductory work to get me back into the flow of things and bring me up
to date with present thinking. Wolff’s book certainly provided that informed
and often entertaining entry into the political world albeit from within my
comfort zone of philosophy. Well, I had to start somewhere and my comfort zone
seemed like a pretty good place to start from. What interested me almost from
the beginning was the author’s admission that there are no easy answers to even
the simplest of questions. Despite apparently endless discussion and debate
down the centuries no one, it would seem, has come up with a cast-iron defence
of ideas which many people in the developed west take for granted as being practically
self-evident and virtually incontestable – that the State is so completely necessary
that it’s non-existence is unthinkable, that Democracy is the best form of
government, that Liberty is the virtue par excellence and that all other
political virtues spring from this defining principle and that the individual
should be the focus of all political discourse as holders of inviolate rights
that can never be overturned by a higher authority. Each thought or assumption
had a chapter to itself where the author struggled with ideas and defences put
up (or torn down) by a host of political philosophers both past and present.
The only chapter which appeared to deviate from this format was on the
distribution of wealth which concentrated on, indeed seemed to be more of a detailed
proposal for, rather than a debate about, the work of John Rawls. I’d come
across his ideas before and was rather unconvinced by the whole thing and
having to wade through a chapter on the same subject was almost too much for
me. But putting one turgid chapter aside this was generally a very good book
which, in true philosophic style came to no great conclusion on anything but
hopefully stated that at least we understand the problem a bit more now! It did
give me much to think about and much to mull over. I had thought that the
foundations of western democratic capitalism had been fairly well thought out
over the preceding few centuries and that we had a fair idea of what exactly it
is we want and how to get it. Apparently not – which I suppose makes the whole
thing that much more interesting and important. Much more politics to come.
2 comments:
I'm most curious about Liberty versus other virtues...what did it compete against? Order, tradition? -- or today, "Efficiency"?
He pointed out that liberty doesn't mean licence and freedom cannot be absolute so we need Law and by extension Justice. In other words liberty can be restrained by the state to protect others who cannot protect themselves.
He used Mill quite a bit and seemed to be arguing from the Utilitarian point of view - so that when Liberty is in danger of causing more harm than good that liberty needs to be curtailed. Utility trumps Liberty.
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