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Socratic Citizenship
 
 
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Socratic Citizenship [Paperback]

Dana Villa (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

October 1, 2001

Many critics bemoan the lack of civic engagement in America. Tocqueville's ''nation of joiners'' seems to have become a nation of alienated individuals, disinclined to fulfill the obligations of citizenship or the responsibilities of self-government. In response, the critics urge community involvement and renewed education in the civic virtues. But what kind of civic engagement do we want, and what sort of citizenship should we encourage? In Socratic Citizenship, Dana Villa takes issue with those who would reduce citizenship to community involvement or to political participation for its own sake. He argues that we need to place more value on a form of conscientious, moderately alienated citizenship invented by Socrates, one that is critical in orientation and dissident in practice.

Taking Plato's Apology of Socrates as his starting point, Villa argues that Socrates was the first to show, in his words and deeds, how moral and intellectual integrity can go hand in hand, and how they can constitute importantly civic--and not just philosophical or moral--virtues. More specifically, Socrates urged that good citizens should value this sort of integrity more highly than such apparent virtues as patriotism, political participation, piety, and unwavering obedience to the law. Yet Socrates' radical redefinition of citizenship has had relatively little influence on Western political thought. Villa considers how the Socratic idea of the thinking citizen is treated by five of the most influential political thinkers of the past two centuries--John Stuart Mill, Friedrich Nietzsche, Max Weber, Hannah Arendt, and Leo Strauss. In doing so, he not only deepens our understanding of these thinkers' work and of modern ideas of citizenship, he also shows how the fragile Socratic idea of citizenship has been lost through a persistent devaluation of independent thought and action in public life.

Engaging current debates among political and social theorists, this insightful book shows how we must reconceive the idea of good citizenship if we are to begin to address the shaky fundamentals of civic culture in America today.



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Editorial Reviews

Review


An exceptional book, well written and instructive at every point. -- Choice



This book deserves a wide, appreciative readership, both for the importance of the argument and for the depth and breadth of the interpretations that support it. -- Gerald Mara, American Political Science Review



Villa has put his finger on the tension to which liberals and deliberative democrats will have to devote ever more attention, and he has written an informative and stimulating book. -- Cillian McBride, Philosophy in Review

Review

In this extraordinary work Dana Villa gives us a deep, detailed, and provocative account of what five very difficult thinkers made of the prospects for Socratic integrity in the context of modern citizenship. His pursuit of the thematic concerns is masterly. (Jeremy Waldron, Columbia University ) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 380 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (October 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691086931
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691086934
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #863,532 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Hard Task of Citizenship, June 11, 2011
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This review is from: Socratic Citizenship (Paperback)
No reviews of this extraordinary book? Very strange. In successive chapters Dana Villa examines Socrates, Mill, Nietzsche, Weber, Arendt and Strauss. This review will focus on the Weber chapter.

Weber can be boiled down to two principles: (1) All politics is conflict and the political actor must be willing to use morally dubious means. As Villa writes "the ethical imperative that guides the political actor is not avoid injustice [Socrates' imperative] but do what must be done." (2) Politics is an autonomous sphere of life. Spheres of life (e.g., politics, religion, art, science, economics) have radically different approaches to the good. It is man's fate to disagree about what is good and what policies will yield the good. For Weber, one chooses one's good and then fights. Villa writes, "the hard part is keeping even the semblance of intellectual conscience alive after one has made the leap."

Weber also has two fears: (1) Increasing bureaucracy leads to dystopia; (2) Men faced with value pluralism might be overwhelmed and default to nihilism. In his chapter on Nietzsche Villa explains why nihilism is not a danger but fear of it led Nietzsche and Weber down dangerous paths.

In the Politics as a Vocation lecture Villa explains Weber's attempt to revive and secularize the Calvinist conception of the calling. Weber's is a conviction politics. Only passionate belief, devotion to an innerworldly cause (not an otherworldly truth) keeps man from falling into nihilism.

Weber points out the disastrous consequences of taking a code of action which govern one sphere and applying it to another. For example, the absolutist ethic of the gospel is the doctrine of nonretalitation, such resignation makes the Christian ethic inapplicable to the political sphere, it would allow evil to flourish. To get results in this all too human world, we need, when necessary, to be hard, to do what must be done. Weber knows the actions of being hard were "soul-staining." He also knew we need men who will do this disspiriting work (the best of these leaders do this work even though they are personally shattered by it, e.g., Lincoln).

Weber contrasts an ethic of conviction where intention is all with an ethic of responsibility which pays attention to actual consequences. According to Weber the heroic politician is not intoxicated with his cause because he is made sober with an ethic of responsiblility. Many critics challenge Weber on this point. Villa points out that Weber's own balance did not derive from taking up a cause but from cultivating independent judgment as explained in the science as a vocation lecture.

One of Villa's main lessons is that the body politic is in need of gadflys, citizens who see politics through the lens of science as a vocation rather than as mere camp followers of ideological armies.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
JUDITH SHKLAR BEGINS her short book on American citizenship by observing that "there is no notion more central to politics than citizenship, and none more variable in history, or contested in theory." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
philosophical citizenship, abstentionist morality, true political art, dissolvent rationality, dissident citizenship, bios politikos, avoiding injustice, citizen among citizens, moral expertise, agonistic politics, ascetic priest, human plurality, warring gods, moral individualism, intellectual conscience, classical political philosophy, civic republican tradition, representative thinking, dissident opinion, narrow test, spiritual aristocracy
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Funeral Oration, The Human Condition, Twilight of the Idols, Hannah Arendt, King Nomos, The Gay Science, Max Weber, George Grote, Plato's Republic, The Spirit of the Age, Adolf Eichmann, Christian God, New Testament, Platonic Socrates, Richard Kraut, West Prussia
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