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图书目录:Introduction
Partial and total criticism Knowledge and politics The critical argument The problem of recognition The problem of language The problem of history The positive program The theory of the welfare-corporate state The theory of the self The theory of organic groups Theory and the moral sentiments CHAPTER 1. Liberal Psychology Introduction The antinomy of theory and fact The unreflective view of mind The principle of reason and desire The principle of arbitrary desire The principle of analysis The moralities of reason and desire The antinomy of reason and desire The idea of personality Roles and personality CHAPTER 2. Liberal Political Theory Introduction The unreflective view of society The principle of rules and values Value and rule Positivism and natural right The legal mentality The principle of subjective value The principle of individualism Order, freedom, and law: the problem of legislation The antinomy of rules and values: the problem of adjudication The sharing of values CHAPTER 3. The Unity of Liberal Thought Introduction The unity of liberal thought and the problem of method Arbitrary desire and subjective value Analysis and individualism Parts and wholes The universal and the particular From critique to construction The unity of universals and particulars The interplay of universals and particulars CHAPTER 4. The Theory of the Welfare-Corporate State Introduction Social consciousness and social order The liberal state Social consciousness in the liberal state Instrumentalism Individualism Social place The ideal of transcendence Social order in the liberal state Principles of social order Class and role Impersonal rules and personal dependence The bureaucracy The welfare-corporate state Social consciousness in the welfare-corporate state The rejection of the dominant consciousness The ideal of immanence The union of immanence and transcendence Social order in the welfare-corporate state The conflicts of bureaucratic organization The resolution of the conflicts Signs of change Significance of the emergent social order The socialist state Toward a conclusion CHAPTER 5. The Theory ofthe Self Introduction The conception of a theory of the self The idea of the self Decisive issues Method of exposition and proof Self and nature Self and others The abstract and the concrete self The self and the world The everyday and the extraordinary CHAPTER 6. The Theory o/Organic Groups Introduction The good Domination and community Theory and prudence The organic group General conception The community of life The democracy of ends The division of labor Conclusion Freedom The state The dilemmas of communitarian politics God Notes Index Postscript |