A Democratic Theory of Judgment

★★★★★ 4.2 73 reviews

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Management number 232103041 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price US$1.03 Model Number 232103041
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In this sweeping look at political and philosophical history, Linda M. G. Zerilli unpacks the tightly woven core of Hannah Arendt's unfinished work on a tenacious modern problem: how to judge critically in the wake of the collapse of inherited criteria of judgment. Engaging a remarkable breadth of thinkers, including Ludwig Wittgenstein, Leo Strauss, Immanuel Kant, Frederick Douglass, John Rawls, Jürgen Habermas, Martha Nussbaum, and many others, Zerilli clears a hopeful path between an untenable universalism and a cultural relativism that forever defers the possibility of judging at all.           Zerilli deftly outlines the limitations of existing debates, both those that concern themselves with the impossibility of judging across cultures and those that try to find transcendental, rational values to anchor judgment. Looking at Kant through the lens of Arendt, Zerilli develops the notion of a public conception of truth, and from there she explores relativism, historicism, and universalism as they shape feminist approaches to judgment. Following Arendt even further, Zerilli arrives at a hopeful new pathway—seeing the collapse of philosophical criteria for judgment not as a problem but a way to practice judgment anew as a world-building activity of democratic citizens. The result is an astonishing theoretical argument that travels through—and goes beyond—some of the most important political thought of the modern period.  Read more

ASIN B01MYVL0T6
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 978-0226398037
Language English
File size 2.6 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Publisher The University of Chicago Press
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 402 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Publication date December 12, 2016
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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