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Theoretically Speaking
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11856 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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8 / 1987 |
2,866 Words |
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Morton Kaplan Morton Kaplan is editor and publisher of the The World & I. |
A CONFLICT OF VISIONS
Ideological Origins of Political Struggles
Thomas Sowell
New York: William Morrow, 1987
273 pp., $15.95
Thomas Sowell, who is a scholar-in-residence at the Hoover Institution, is well known for his voluminous writings on the economics of race. Sowell is a conservative thinker who has opposed, on economic, sociological, and philosophical grounds, many of the positions taken by left-liberals on affirmative action. His writings are distinguished by their intellectual acuity and their dispassionate reasonableness.
In A Conflict of Visions Sowell turns back to what he regards as his true métier, one he has pursued for thirty years - the history of ideas. Here he investigates what he sees as two contrasting visions - the constrained and the unconstrained - from which arise ideological positions. He argues that ideas tend to fall into constellations or visions of how the world works and what is appropriate in such worlds. He contends that the visions, which concern knowledge, reason, and social processes, apply to concepts of equality, power and justice. Generally they fall under the rubric of "constrained" or "unconstrained." But hybrid forms may evolve - Marxism, for instance - and they may change over time.
If this book is viewed as an essay on the history of ideas, then it succeeds admirably in presenting to the intelligent lay reader two imagers of the nature of the world that have influenced legal, economic, social, and political opinions
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