The Pursuit of Equality in the West
One of the world's foremost historians of Western political and legal thought proposes a bold new model for thinking about equality at a time when its absence threatens democracies everywhere. How much equality does democracy need to survive? Political thinkers have wrestled with that question...
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Zusammenfassung: | One of the world's foremost historians of Western
political and legal thought proposes a bold new model for thinking
about equality at a time when its absence threatens democracies
everywhere. How much equality does democracy need to
survive? Political thinkers have wrestled with that question for
millennia. Aristotle argued that some are born to command and
others to obey. Antiphon believed that men, at least, were born
equal. Later the Romans upended the debate by asking whether
citizens were equals not in ruling but in standing before the law.
Aldo Schiavone guides us through these and other historical
thickets, from the first democracy to the present day, seeking
solutions to the enduring tension between democracy and inequality.
Turning from Antiquity to the modern world, Schiavone shows how the
American and the French revolutions attempted to settle old
debates, introducing a new way of thinking about equality. Both the
French revolutionaries and the American colonists sought democracy
and equality together, but the European tradition (British Labour,
Russian and Eastern European Marxists, and Northern European social
democrats) saw formal equality-equality before the law-as a means
of obtaining economic equality. The American model, in contrast,
adopted formal equality while setting aside the goal of economic
equality. The Pursuit of Equality in the West argues that
the United States and European models were compatible with
industrial-age democracy, but neither suffices in the face of
today's technological revolution. Opposing both atomization and the
obsolete myths of the collective, Schiavone thinks equality anew,
proposing a model founded on neither individualism nor the erasure
of the individual but rather on the universality of the impersonal
human, which coexists with the sea of differences that makes each
of us unique. |
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DOI: | 10.2307/j.ctv2kzv0cv |