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Book Synopsis

Frank MacKinnon is an urbane observer of the human condition. He believes in participatory democracy, but does not think that it or any other system will work if it is put on an ideological pedestal -- or if its limitations are not discussed frankly, and then remedied effectively.
In the opening chapters he describes in general ways the positions and strategies adopted today by people with various kinds of powers. He then examines in considerable detail several of man's major institutions -- governments and professions, churches, universities, and cultural bodies. Some of his conclusions are:
- Man has become very theoretical
- Man tends to take dogmatic positions based on his theories, so that social action becomes a contest rather than a dialogue -- a relationship among theories and institutions often rendered unintelligible by jargon and unworkable by regulation, rather than a communication among men.
- Man fancies administration and devotes much energy to ent

Postures and Politics

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    A Paperback by Frank MacKinnon


      View other formats and editions of Postures and Politics by Frank MacKinnon

      Publisher: University of Toronto Press
      Publication Date: 12/15/1973 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780802061676, 978-0802061676
      ISBN10: 0802061672

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Frank MacKinnon is an urbane observer of the human condition. He believes in participatory democracy, but does not think that it or any other system will work if it is put on an ideological pedestal -- or if its limitations are not discussed frankly, and then remedied effectively.
      In the opening chapters he describes in general ways the positions and strategies adopted today by people with various kinds of powers. He then examines in considerable detail several of man's major institutions -- governments and professions, churches, universities, and cultural bodies. Some of his conclusions are:
      - Man has become very theoretical
      - Man tends to take dogmatic positions based on his theories, so that social action becomes a contest rather than a dialogue -- a relationship among theories and institutions often rendered unintelligible by jargon and unworkable by regulation, rather than a communication among men.
      - Man fancies administration and devotes much energy to ent

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