Moral Clarity : A Guide for Grown-Up Idealists
Moral Clarity : A Guide for Grown-Up Idealists
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Author(s): Neiman, Susan
ISBN No.: 9780099526278
Pages: 480
Year: 201111
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 30.29
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"A subtle and energetic guide to the unjustly maligned Western canon. Neiman writes with verve and a sometimes epigrammatic wit' Gary Rosen, Wall Street Journal 'Forget the Man Booker list, Susan Neiman's superb new book should be at the top of beach reads this summer. For what Neiman beautifully chronicles is how in all sorts of policy areas the left has let slip its Enlightenment bearings and is no longer able to act on moral impulses. Now is the time to turn to Neiman and re-inject some morality into progressive politics - for the good of everyone' Tristram Hunt 'Neiman's particular skill lies in expressing sensitivity, intelligence and moral seriousness without any hint of oversimplification, dogmatism or misplaced piety. She clearly and unflinchingly sees life as it is, but also sees how it might be, and could be, if we recaptured some of the hopes and ideas that currently escape us. Deep and important' Simon Blackburn, New York Times In Moral Clarity Susan Neiman shows how the philosophical resources of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment can help us to construct a politics that does not repeat the mistakes of Marxism or succumb to the temptations of a cynicism that masquerades as realism. Through her commitment to the claims of reason and the facts of the world, her shrewd and generous readings of the Western canon, and above all through her conviction that politics is a moral endeavour, Neiman issues an irresistible invitation to make the world more just. 'In Moral Clarity Susan Neiman criticises the philosophical ideas that dominate contemporary culture and politics on a grand scale.


Neiman skewers this well-worn genealogy with splendid directness' Onora O'Neill, Financial Times 'Neiman asks people to reject the false choice between Utopia and degeneracy.Moral progress, she writes, is neither guaranteed nor is it hopeless.Instead, it is up to us' Edward Carr, The Economist.


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