Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Bates's own position is supremely original and perfectly and clearly articulated. He shows that the political does not have to lead to fascism and violence and exclusion (clearly it has not prevented these things from taking place) but can have a more progressive, individualist, and anti-exclusionary form. -- James Martel, San Francisco State University In this breakthrough rereading of early-modern thought, David William Bates discovers the origins of liberal norms in and through the creation of a fully autonomous political domain. As Bates shows, it was no accident that construction of internal constitutionalist restraints on the state occurred just as the modern state emerged to its full external potential for global violence. Bates's argument is at the cutting edge in the history of political thought, and his interpretations of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau renovate the study of each author. -- Samuel Moyn, Columbia University [A] masterful study. -- David Tkach The Review of Politics

Table of Contents
Foreword by Dick Howard Preface Introduction: Constitutional Violence and Enlightenment Thought 1. The Autonomous State and the Origin of the Political 2. States of Reasoning: Modern Natural-Law Theory 3. Locke's Natural History of the Political 4. Systems of Sovereignty in Montesquieu 5. Rousseau's Cybernetic Political Body Conclusion: From the Concept of the Political to the Rule of Law Notes Index

States of War

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    A Hardback by David Bates

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 01/11/2011
      ISBN13: 9780231158046, 978-0231158046
      ISBN10: 0231158041

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Bates's own position is supremely original and perfectly and clearly articulated. He shows that the political does not have to lead to fascism and violence and exclusion (clearly it has not prevented these things from taking place) but can have a more progressive, individualist, and anti-exclusionary form. -- James Martel, San Francisco State University In this breakthrough rereading of early-modern thought, David William Bates discovers the origins of liberal norms in and through the creation of a fully autonomous political domain. As Bates shows, it was no accident that construction of internal constitutionalist restraints on the state occurred just as the modern state emerged to its full external potential for global violence. Bates's argument is at the cutting edge in the history of political thought, and his interpretations of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau renovate the study of each author. -- Samuel Moyn, Columbia University [A] masterful study. -- David Tkach The Review of Politics

      Table of Contents
      Foreword by Dick Howard Preface Introduction: Constitutional Violence and Enlightenment Thought 1. The Autonomous State and the Origin of the Political 2. States of Reasoning: Modern Natural-Law Theory 3. Locke's Natural History of the Political 4. Systems of Sovereignty in Montesquieu 5. Rousseau's Cybernetic Political Body Conclusion: From the Concept of the Political to the Rule of Law Notes Index

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