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The Bounds Of Liberalism The Fragility Of Freedom Neville Brown

  • SKU: BELL-47162650
The Bounds Of Liberalism The Fragility Of Freedom Neville Brown
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Bounds Of Liberalism The Fragility Of Freedom Neville Brown instant download after payment.

Publisher: Sussex Academic Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.66 MB
Pages: 364
Author: Neville Brown
ISBN: 9781845193522, 1845193520
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

The Bounds Of Liberalism The Fragility Of Freedom Neville Brown by Neville Brown 9781845193522, 1845193520 instant download after payment.

The core issue of this work is how far the West may need to modify or extend the liberal philosophy informing its responses to the multiple world crisis it is now attempting to deal with. Coming after the author's "Engaging the Cosmos: Astronomy, Philosophy & Faith" and "The Geography of Human Conflict", this text will complete a trilogy addressing very comprehensively the challenges of our times. It provides a review of the strengths and weaknesses of Social Liberalism that, broadly speaking, occupies the ground between moderate Right and moderate Left. The work is informed by the conviction that the world, half a century hence, will be either considerably better than now (freer, more peaceable, more enriching...) or else a good deal worse. Those concerned to effect the former outcome should promote the spread among emergent states of well-founded democracy. But they must also look stringently at how well democratic institutions may function in the mass societies of the West. History indicates that pell-mell cultural change, constant ecological impoverishment, and endless leap forwards in applied science may not augur well for stability and peace. The author's accepted expertise in History, International Security, Planetary Development and Applied Geophysics means he can address a variety of issues such as: climate change and resource depletion; community decay, data saturation, the future of universities, democratic devolution, leaders and led, and medical philosophy; and biowarfare, the management of Near Space, international currency, and a planetary ethos. It is contended that we are not approaching the "end of History" in any meaningful sense. Instead we are passing through, at accelerated pace, an evolutionary transition as impacting as that between the Old and New Stone Ages. Our perspectives on the immediate future may be honed by free-ranging speculation about what mankind can anticipate over the next few centuries.

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