Rousseau’s Politics of Taste
Author(s)
Holley, Jared
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Number
3d6c8824-8914-464c-9d15-aacd463d94d9Language
EnglishAbstract
Rousseau’s Politics of Taste challenges the popular but partial pictures we have of Rousseau as an inconsistent ‘ancient’ utopian or a ‘modern’ abstract philosopher with a systematising spirit. Combining intellectual history and political theory, it reinterprets his understandings of pleasure and happiness, judgment and amour-propre, inequality, the general will and, above all, taste. Rousseau’s readers have long recognised the complex tensions in his thought. By reconstructing his theory of taste as a kind of modern Epicureanism, this book provides a way of articulating neglected patterns in those tensions and, a new understanding of what he was attempting to achieve with his political thought.
Keywords
Political Science; History & Theory; Philosophy; Political; Philosophy; Individual PhilosophersISBN
9781399521178Publisher
Edinburgh University PressPublisher website
https://www.euppublishing.com/Publication date and place
2024Grantor
Imprint
Edinburgh University PressClassification
Political science & theory
Social & political philosophy
Philosophy