Cosmopolitanism in modernity : human dignity in a global age
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Cosmopolitanism in modernity : human dignity in a global age
(Logos : perspectives on modern society and culture)
Lexington Books, c2012
- : cloth
Available at / 1 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
At the close of the twentieth century, cosmopolitanism emerged as an important source of ideas for approaching the current challenges and opportunities of the intensifying global interconnections and socioeconomic disparities within and across borders. Anand Bertrand Commissiong analyzes the contributions of theorists seeking cosmopolitan solutions to struggles for human happiness and dignity. He focuses on the ways in which the ideal has been forced to adapt, by accepting its limitations, as it maintains its fundamental insistence on the potential of universal human community that simultaneously constitutively encompasses difference. He examines a combination of strategies specifically addressing individual, communal and intercommunal levels of human interaction that he argues are the most productive ways forward.
Commissiong recommends non-imperialist, accountable, coalitional strategies that set the stage for a different understanding of human beings in our contemporary globalizing world by offering a broad approach that can form coalitions with ideals beyond Western traditions, such as satyagraha, in order to conceive of dynamic human individuality and community that stretches beyond local boundaries. Commissiong makes a powerful argument for a new type of cosmopolitanism that is vital to the establishment of a truly just human existence at institutional, communal, and individual levels.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Local and Global: Notes from Recent US Elections
"the sigh of the oppressed creature, the sentiment of a heartless world"
The Market Mind-set and the Faith in the Market
Cosmopolitan Ideas in Modernity
Issues of Definition
Part 1: Ancient and Modern Sources and Contexts
1 Ancient and Modern Cosmopolitanisms
Ancient and Early Modern Cosmopolitanisms
Modern and Contemporary Contexts
A Survey of the Varieties of Cosmopolitanism in Modernity
Moral and Political Cosmopolitanism
2 The Rise of Economic Individualism and the Development of the Commercial Community
A Crisis of Conscience: The Crumbling Sacred Canopy and the Changing Sources of Authority
Globalization: The Sheltering Market
The Heart of Empire
Cosmopolitanism vs. Globalization: The Responsibilities of Freedom
Part 2: Contemporary Cosmopolitanisms
3 Martha Nussbaum and the Individual at the Center: Liberties and Capabilities, Theory and Practice
Theory: Stoic Theories of Reason, Association, and Moral Development
Practice: Action and Conflicting Duties
The Capabilities Approach
Universal Values and the Primacy of the Individual
4 Jurgen Habermas and the Individual in Community: Freedom and Responsibility in the Nation-State
"Perpetual Peace": Kant's Cosmopolitan Idea Reconsidered
The Rule of Law and Popular Sovereignty in Modern Democracy
Habermas's Linguistic Turn
Globalization and the Post-National Constellation
Habermas: A Critical Appraisal
5 David Held: Freedom and Accountability Beyond the Nation-State
The Interstate System and Modern Democracy
The Nation-State: Its Uses and Abuses
International Accountability and Enforcement
National and International Public Spheres
Transnational Public Spheres and Transnational Solidarity
Part 3: Restating the Case
6 Cosmopolitan Virtues for a Modern World
Fracturing of the Fatal Circle(s)
Heterogeneity and Solidarity
7 Cosmopolitanism Law
The New New World Order: Unfinished Business
Cosmopolitanism and the Left: The Theory and Practice of Cosmopolitan Law
Stoic Cosmopolitanism Today
8 Conclusion: Our Futures, Together
The One and the Universal
Our Post-National Futures, Unavoidably Side by Side
Bibliography
by "Nielsen BookData"