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Rethinking the Liberal Legacy
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16125 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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6 / 1989 |
2,760 Words |
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A.J. Mandt A.J. Mandt is professor in the Department of Philosophy at the
University of Kansas at Wichita. |
HEGEL'S CRITIQUE OF LIBERALISM
Rights in Context
Steven B. Smith
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989
251 pp., $29.95
In July 1789, the middle-class militia of Paris joined the popular mob in attacking the Bastille. The great prison-fortress in the heart of the city was the bastion of the ancien regime. By its nature, the Bastille showed the majesty and divine authority of the royal regime to be nothing but despotism and brute force. Its fall not only shifted the balance of military force in the tumultuous city but set in fluid motion all the basic symbols of political legitimacy: sovereignty, right, justice, and authority.
In a remarkably short time, the shock effects of the Parisian street fighting propagated throughout Europe. Long before the hapless Louis XVI lost this head, the seismic forces unleashed in France had begun to shake down the edifice of the old order. The contours of the new political landscape that emerged had the shape of what we have since come to call liberalism.
The liberal era transformed the drama and symbols of politics. The high throne and festooned monarch were replaced by the parliamentary rostrum and frock-coasted representatives of the people. The duties of subjects gave way to the rights of citizens. The notion of society as a hierarchic edifice of privileged (and underprivileged) ranks and orders was supplanted by the notion of the universal equality of man. Not least, the power of the church waned; it could no longer
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