Audition
Michael Sandel & Scott Moore on liberalism
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 0:23:21
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Sinopse
"Our public life is rife with discontent." So claims political philosopher Michael Sandel, in his 1996 book Democracy's Discontent: American in Search of a Public Philosophy. Sandel identifies two prominent symptoms of that discontent. "One is the fear that, individually and collectively, we are losing control of the forces that govern our lives. The other is the sense that, from family to neighborhood to nation, the moral fabric of community is unraveling around us." Sandel's book examines the ideas of liberty that have spawned what he calls "unencumbered selves," atomistic individuals with no abiding sense of responsibility, duty, or binding attachments. The political mechanism that encourages this care-free sensibility is what Sandel calls the "procedural republic," the product of a view of the state that envisions government as a guarantor of rights and fairness, scrupulously indifferent to questions of truth or goodness. This issue of Audition includes excerpts from a 1996 interview with Sandel in which