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4.0 out of 5 stars
Freedom,
By
This review is from: Lesson of this Century : With Two Talks on Freedom and the Democratic State (Paperback)
In these interviews with Giancarlo Bosetti, Karl Popper gives us a rare appreciation of current political events, like the Cuba crisis of 1962, Gorbachev's Russia, the fall of the Marxist regimes in Eastern Europe or the Balkan problem (ethnic identity as a State doctrine).His main purpose is individual liberty (freedom of opposition, democracy). The other side of the French Revolution coin, equality, endangers freedom; and if freedom is lost, there will not be equality among the unfree. This is not to say that there should be absolute freedom. Human beings, and certainly the intellectuals, have moral obligations. For Popper, the main problems in the modern world are the search for peace, demographic responsibility (stop the demographic explosion) and good education. At this level, his plea for media censorship is at least controversial. But for him, a message of non-violence is a moral must towards our children. This book should be read as an example of how one of the greatest philosophers of the 20th century proposes solutions for world problems within his philosophical framework and that of other important predecessors like Kant and Mill. |
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The Lesson of this Century: With Two Talks on Freedom and the Democratic State by Patrick Camiller (Hardcover - November 19, 1996)
$90.00
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