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With debates on the meaning of “liberal society” more heated than ever, this is a timely re-issue of a classic text
Can the tension between relativism and the moral universalism current in contemporary politics be resolved within the framework of liberalism? How is liberal society to interpret the diversity of morals? Is pluralism the appropriate response? How does pluralism differ from the widely condemned ethnocentric relativism—“liberalism for the Liberals, cannibalism for the cannibals”?
Confronting liberal thought with its own limitations, Steven Lukes’ work is more relevant than ever. While recognizing the dangers of moral imperialism, Lukes argues that a relativist position based on identifying clearly distinct cultural and moral communities is incoherent. Drawing on work in anthropology and philosophy, he examines the nature of social justice, the politics of identity and human rights theory.Praise for Steven Lukes′s The Curious Enlightenment of Professor Caritat:
“Written in a beautifully clear style, full of a keen, serious wit … Lukes achieves both lightness and weight in a way many novelists might envy.”
—Independent
“This book is a box of delights, often wonderfully funny and always deliciously clever, a contemporary political satire to set among the best.”
—New Statesman
“Knock-out satirical humour.”
—Times Literary Supplement
“Lukes manages to equal the pace and flair of Candide.”
−New York Times Book Review
“Utterly magnetic.”
—Los Angeles Times Book ReviewSteven Lukesis Professor of Politics and Sociology at New York University. Previously, he taught at the London School of Economics and the University of Sienna, and he is the author of numerous worlSk
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