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book jacket

BOOK
Author Willard, Charles Arthur
Title Liberalism and the problem of knowledge : a new rhetoric for modern democracy / Charles Arthur Willard
Published Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1996
Description x, 384 p. ; 24 cm

LOCATION CALL # STATUS
 Law Library LC Collection    JC574 .W55 1996  
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 Law Library Political Science    JC574 W55 1996  
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Table of Contents
 Acknowledgments 
 Introduction: The Yankee Way to Knowledge1
Pt. IThe Public and Its Problems: One More Time11
 1Authenticity and the Rhetoric of Trauma25
 2Romancing the Gesellschaft: Community and the Fallacy of Common Ground40
 3Commensuration and Unificationism68
 4Foucault's Trap87
 5Pluralism, the Public, and the Problem of Knowledge119
 6Democracy in America: A Thought Experiment150
Pt. IIDiscourse across Differences181
 7Epistemics189
 8The Uses of Argument Fields217
 9Fields as Organizations245
 10A Theory of Presumption277
 11Desperately Seeking Dewey293
 12Epilogue: A Rhetoric for Modern Democracy312
 Bibliography333
 Index373
Series New practices of inquiry
Summary In this witty and provocative study of democracy and its critics, Charles Willard debunks liberalism, arguing that its exaggerated ideals of authenticity, unity, and community have deflected attention from the pervasive incompetence of "the rule of experts." He proposes a ground of communication that emphasizes common interests rather than narrow disputes. The problem of "unity" and the public sphere has driven a wedge between libertarians and communitarians. To mediate this conflict, Willard advocates a shift from the discourse of liberalism to that of epistemics. As a means of organizing the ebb and flow of consensus, epistemics regards democracy as a family of knowledge problems - as ways of managing discourse across differences and protecting multiple views. Building a bridge between warring peoples and warring paradigms, this book also reminds those who presume to instruct government that they are obliged to enlighten it, and that to do so requires an enlightened public discourse
Note Charles Willard is professor and chair of the Department of Communication at the University of Louisville
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subjects Liberalism
Democracy
Epistemics
ISBN 0226898458 (cloth : alk. paper)
0226898466 (pbk : alk. paper)
OCLC/Bib Util # 33967621

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