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Democracy's Achilles Heel argues that the structure of democracy is a combination of two incompatible world-views: one relativist and liberal, the other absolutist and conservative. This combination of opposites is essential for its survival, yet places democracy at risk, since each world-view is prone to trying to engulf the other, creating threats from both the right and the left. This is democracy's Achilles heel: it never goes away, and can only be avoided. The nature of open societies means that absolutisms, for example, of a religious kind, can exist quite comfortably within democracy, yet for democracy to succeed, they must permit other belief systems and world-views, absolute or otherwise, to exist alongside them. Likewise, relativisms can undermine the liberal nature of democracy itself in seeking to reduce the existence of absolutisms to nothing, thus threatening freedom and destabilising democracy. Reacting to the recent clashes in Western democracies between left and right, and drawing on the theories of such now-classic thinkers as Fromm, Berlin, Hoffer as well as more recent sources such as Levitsky and Ziblatt's How Democracies Die, the author moves beyond the usual defences of democracy, accepting the fact that democracy, because of its combination of opposites, is always unstable and always at risk, whilst urging those who live within democratic polities to strengthen its chances of survival by remembering its fundamental value and purpose. An impassioned defence of the democratic way of life even given (and indeed because of) its eternally threatened nature, Democracy's Achilles Heel will appeal to scholars, students and readers with interests in political sociology, philosophy and political theory.
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Democracy's Achilles Heel argues that the structure of democracy is a combination of two incompatible world-views: one relativist and liberal, the other absolutist and conservative. This combination of opposites is essential for its survival, yet places democracy at risk, since each world-view is prone to trying to engulf the other, creating threats from both the right and the left. This is democracy's Achilles heel: it never goes away, and can only be avoided. The nature of open societies means that absolutisms, for example, of a religious kind, can exist quite comfortably within democracy, yet for democracy to succeed, they must permit other belief systems and world-views, absolute or otherwise, to exist alongside them. Likewise, relativisms can undermine the liberal nature of democracy itself in seeking to reduce the existence of absolutisms to nothing, thus threatening freedom and destabilising democracy. Reacting to the recent clashes in Western democracies between left and right, and drawing on the theories of such now-classic thinkers as Fromm, Berlin, Hoffer as well as more recent sources such as Levitsky and Ziblatt's How Democracies Die, the author moves beyond the usual defences of democracy, accepting the fact that democracy, because of its combination of opposites, is always unstable and always at risk, whilst urging those who live within democratic polities to strengthen its chances of survival by remembering its fundamental value and purpose. An impassioned defence of the democratic way of life even given (and indeed because of) its eternally threatened nature, Democracy's Achilles Heel will appeal to scholars, students and readers with interests in political sociology, philosophy and political theory.
Reviews