Description

Book Synopsis

To the extent that we worry about the future, we tend to do so with the apprehension that something may go terribly wrong. Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization of Humanity is animated more by the apprehension, what if everything should go terribly right? That foreboding indelibly colored the outlook of Friedrich Nietzsche and Alexis de Tocqueville—two thinkers seldom paired. As David A. Eisenberg argues, each in his own way envisaged the terminus toward which modernity speeds. Examining their thought allows us not only to glimpse the future that filled them with dread, but to survey a road that stretches back millennia to Athens and Jerusalem, when ideas about the primacy of reason and inborn equality of souls took root. Armed with such revolutionary teachings, a particular human type, namely the democratic, gained ascendancy. The reign of this human type portends to be so total that all other human types will be precluded in the democratic future, where what mankind's democratization augurs is not diversification but homogenization. The questions raised in Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization of Humanity seek to broaden the horizons that history's democratizing forces conspire to contract.



Trade Review

This is a detailed and careful study of Nietzsche, Tocqueville, and several of their predecessors. It examines thoughtfully and intelligently their understanding of the democratic soul, the democratic age, and the democratic future.

-- Mark Blitz, Fletcher Jones Professor of Political Philosophy, Claremont McKenna College

David Eisenberg’s Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization of Humanity is an exercise in thought. As such it is an open questioning of the dominant opinions of the day. Today’s dominant opinions are depicted by supporters as revolutionary. But as the dominant constellation of opinion, much that rules in the contemporary academy has transformed itself into a reactionary form of thinking complete with its own new inquisitions. Like any reactionary force, it attempts to insulate itself from critical reflection.

Intentionally iconoclastic, Eisenberg attempts to follow the real Nietzsche in being “untimely.” In this regard, Nietzsche breaks from the Hegel and Marx who asserted that philosophy is never more than its own time comprehended in thought. For Hegel and Marx, philosophy is never anything more than a justification of reigning “social constructs.” Eisenberg rightly grasps that untimeliness is of the real essence of philosophy as it has been for everyone from Socrates to Galileo to those who will not fall in line with the dominant pieties of the day.

Eisenberg uses hermeneutic analyses of the concerned but democratically supportive Tocqueville, and the far more appalled and polemically anti-democratic Nietzsche, to analyze the commitments and dangers of the core but increasingly hidden premises of a reductionist egalitarian and democratic age. Those premises threaten to undermine the best of the modern age’s own aspirations and accomplishments and thereby implode. Lurking in the now dominant radical and reductionist egalitarianism is the specter a never before seen suffocating, dehumanizing tyranny of body and soul. Beyond being a useful exercise in open-minded thought, the text constructs a thoughtful and insightful dialogue between two authors who in different ways signal concerns that should be part of the understanding of genuinely educated supporters of Modern Republicanism, constitutionalism, limited government and the rule of law in the 21st century.

-- Gregory Bruce Smith, Trinity College, and Founder and President of the Churchill Institute

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Note to the Reader

Introduction

Chapter One: Homo(genized) Sapiens

Chapter Two: Aristocratic Man

Chapter Three: The Revolutions

Chapter Four: Democratic Man

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

About the Author

Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization

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    A Hardback by David A. Eisenberg

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      View other formats and editions of Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization by David A. Eisenberg

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 01/08/2022
      ISBN13: 9781793627872, 978-1793627872
      ISBN10: 1793627878

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      To the extent that we worry about the future, we tend to do so with the apprehension that something may go terribly wrong. Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization of Humanity is animated more by the apprehension, what if everything should go terribly right? That foreboding indelibly colored the outlook of Friedrich Nietzsche and Alexis de Tocqueville—two thinkers seldom paired. As David A. Eisenberg argues, each in his own way envisaged the terminus toward which modernity speeds. Examining their thought allows us not only to glimpse the future that filled them with dread, but to survey a road that stretches back millennia to Athens and Jerusalem, when ideas about the primacy of reason and inborn equality of souls took root. Armed with such revolutionary teachings, a particular human type, namely the democratic, gained ascendancy. The reign of this human type portends to be so total that all other human types will be precluded in the democratic future, where what mankind's democratization augurs is not diversification but homogenization. The questions raised in Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization of Humanity seek to broaden the horizons that history's democratizing forces conspire to contract.



      Trade Review

      This is a detailed and careful study of Nietzsche, Tocqueville, and several of their predecessors. It examines thoughtfully and intelligently their understanding of the democratic soul, the democratic age, and the democratic future.

      -- Mark Blitz, Fletcher Jones Professor of Political Philosophy, Claremont McKenna College

      David Eisenberg’s Nietzsche and Tocqueville on the Democratization of Humanity is an exercise in thought. As such it is an open questioning of the dominant opinions of the day. Today’s dominant opinions are depicted by supporters as revolutionary. But as the dominant constellation of opinion, much that rules in the contemporary academy has transformed itself into a reactionary form of thinking complete with its own new inquisitions. Like any reactionary force, it attempts to insulate itself from critical reflection.

      Intentionally iconoclastic, Eisenberg attempts to follow the real Nietzsche in being “untimely.” In this regard, Nietzsche breaks from the Hegel and Marx who asserted that philosophy is never more than its own time comprehended in thought. For Hegel and Marx, philosophy is never anything more than a justification of reigning “social constructs.” Eisenberg rightly grasps that untimeliness is of the real essence of philosophy as it has been for everyone from Socrates to Galileo to those who will not fall in line with the dominant pieties of the day.

      Eisenberg uses hermeneutic analyses of the concerned but democratically supportive Tocqueville, and the far more appalled and polemically anti-democratic Nietzsche, to analyze the commitments and dangers of the core but increasingly hidden premises of a reductionist egalitarian and democratic age. Those premises threaten to undermine the best of the modern age’s own aspirations and accomplishments and thereby implode. Lurking in the now dominant radical and reductionist egalitarianism is the specter a never before seen suffocating, dehumanizing tyranny of body and soul. Beyond being a useful exercise in open-minded thought, the text constructs a thoughtful and insightful dialogue between two authors who in different ways signal concerns that should be part of the understanding of genuinely educated supporters of Modern Republicanism, constitutionalism, limited government and the rule of law in the 21st century.

      -- Gregory Bruce Smith, Trinity College, and Founder and President of the Churchill Institute

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments

      Note to the Reader

      Introduction

      Chapter One: Homo(genized) Sapiens

      Chapter Two: Aristocratic Man

      Chapter Three: The Revolutions

      Chapter Four: Democratic Man

      Conclusion

      Bibliography

      Index

      About the Author

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