Eric Voegelin and the Foundations of Modern Political Science
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Author
Publication
1999-08-01 - University of Missouri Press
Language
English
Word Count
115,750 words, Guess
Page Count
463 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL8166316M
- ISBN-139780826212290
- ISBN-100826212298
- OCLC Control Number41223971
- OCLC Control Numberericvoegelinfoun00coop_448
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number99024837
- Goodreads334691
- LibraryThing8561635
Classifications
- LCCJC263.V632 C65 1999
Description
This important new work is a major analysis of the foundation of Eric Voegelin's political science. Barry Cooper maintains that the writings Voegelin undertook in the 1940s provide the groundwork for the brilliant book that is one of his best known, The New Science of Politics. At the time of that book's publication, however, few were aware of the enormous knowledge and accomplished scholarship that lay behind its illuminating, although sometimes baffling, formulations. By focusing on several of the key chapters in Voegelin's eight-volume History of Political Ideas, especially the studies of Bodin, Vico, and Schelling, Cooper shows how those studies provide the basis for Voegelin's thought. Investigating Voegelin's study of Oriental influences on Western political "ideas," especially Mongol constitutional law, and his study of Toynbee, Cooper seeks to demonstrate the vast range of materials Voegelin used. In Eric Voegelin and the Foundations of Modern Political Science, Cooper makes the connection between Voegelin's political writings of the 1940s and the meditative interpretations that began to appear with the publication of Anamnesis and with the later volumes of Order and History much more intelligible than does any existing discussion of Voegelin. Scholars in intellectual history and political science will benefit enormously from this valuable new addition to Voegelin studies.
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