Imperfect Cosmopolis

Imperfect Cosmopolis
Title Imperfect Cosmopolis PDF eBook
Author Georg Cavallar
Publisher University of Wales Press
Total Pages 226
Release 2011-04-15
Genre History
ISBN 0708323685

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In current debates, the term "cosmopolitanism" often remains quite vague and leads to sweeping generalizations. this book looks at the notion from a decidedly historical perspective, trying to give depth and texture to the concept.

Imperfect Cosmopolis

Imperfect Cosmopolis
Title Imperfect Cosmopolis PDF eBook
Author Georg Cavallar
Publisher University of Wales Press
Total Pages 275
Release 2011-04-15
Genre History
ISBN 178316459X

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In current debates, the term cosmopolitanismA” often remains quite vague and leads to sweeping generalizations. Unlike many recent publications, this book looks at the notion from a decidedly historical perspective, trying to give depth and texture to the concept.

Hospitality and World Politics

Hospitality and World Politics
Title Hospitality and World Politics PDF eBook
Author Gideon Baker
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 257
Release 2013-02-07
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1137290005

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A long neglected concept in the field of international relations and political theory, hospitality provides a new framework for analysing many of the challenges in world politics today, from the search for peaceable relations between states to asylum and refugee crises.

Philosophy after Friendship

Philosophy after Friendship
Title Philosophy after Friendship PDF eBook
Author Gregg Lambert
Publisher U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages 243
Release 2017-04-20
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 145295349X

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The friend, the enemy, the stranger, the refugee or deportee, and the survivor. In singular and provocative fashion, Gregg Lambert’s Philosophy after Friendship introduces us to the key social personae that have populated modern political philosophy. Drawing on the philosophies of Deleuze and Derrida, as well as the work of Indo-European linguist Émile Benveniste, Lambert constructs a genealogy to demonstrate how political thought has been structured by the emergence of such “conceptual personae.” At the center of Philosophy after Friendship is the persona of the friend, together with the idea of friendship, on which the democratic ideals of consensus, fraternity, and equality are based. Lambert argues that the vitality of this conceptual persona, originated by the Greeks, has been exhausted by centuries of war. In fact, we might today be witnessing the overturning of an earlier philosophical idealism that saw friendship as the destination of the political and, in its place, the emergence of a nonphilosophical understanding that has set perpetual war as the ultimate ground from which future thinking of the political must depart. In his Conclusion, Lambert proposes a truly “postwar philosophy” that takes as its first principle the idea of perpetual peace, which would require nothing less than a complete reevaluation of the goals of any future political philosophy, if not the meaning of philosophy itself.

Kant’s Embedded Cosmopolitanism

Kant’s Embedded Cosmopolitanism
Title Kant’s Embedded Cosmopolitanism PDF eBook
Author Georg Cavallar
Publisher Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages 225
Release 2015-05-19
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 3110429403

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Kant’s omnipresence in contemporary cosmopolitan discourses contrasts with the fact that little is known about the historical origins and the systematic status of his cosmopolitan theory. This study argues that Kant’s cosmopolitanism should be understood as embedded and dynamic. Inspired by Rousseau, Kant developed a form of cosmopolitanism rooted in a modified form of republican patriotism. In contrast to static forms of cosmopolitanism, Kant conceived the tensions between embedded, local attachments and cosmopolitan obligations in dynamic terms. He posited duties to develop a cosmopolitan disposition (Gesinnung), to establish common laws or cosmopolitan institutions, and to found and promote legal, moral, and religious communities which reform themselves in a way that they can pass the test of cosmopolitan universality. This is the cornerstone of Kant’s cosmopolitanism, and the key concept is the vocation (Bestimmung) of the individual as well as of the human species. Since realizing or at least approaching this vocation is a long-term, arduous, and slow process, Kant turns to the pedagogical implications of this cosmopolitan project and spells them out in his later writings. This book uncovers Kant’s hidden theory of cosmopolitan education within the framework of his overall practical philosophy.

Toward Kantian Cosmopolitanism

Toward Kantian Cosmopolitanism
Title Toward Kantian Cosmopolitanism PDF eBook
Author Lorena Cebolla Sanahuja
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 231
Release 2017-09-07
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 3319639889

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This book examines the history of cosmopolitanism from its origins in the ancient world up to its use in Kantian political philosophy. Taking the idea of ‘common property of the land’ as a starting point, the author makes the original case that attention to this concept is needed to properly understand the notion of cosmopolitan citizenship. Offering a reconstruction of cosmopolitanism from an interdisciplinary point of view, Toward Kantian Cosmopolitanism shows how the concept sits at the intersection between philosophical debates, legal realities and the origins of the construction of the discipline of international law. Essential reading for all researchers and advances students of cosmopolitanism, political philosophy and the history of international law, it broadens the current understanding of the concept of cosmopolitanism and reflects on cosmopolitan studies from a historical and philosophical point of view.

History, Politics, Law

History, Politics, Law
Title History, Politics, Law PDF eBook
Author Annabel Brett
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 423
Release 2021-10-07
Genre History
ISBN 1108842461

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Juxtaposes standpoints from which disciplines of history, political thought and law conceive and generate political order beyond the state.