2,255 research outputs found
Conservative Idealism and International Institutions
Like many Anglo-American conservatives, Jeremy Rabkin believes that the European Union ( EU ) presents a serious challenge to American policy aims and American political ideals. \u27 This argument is timely, for the defense of American sovereignty seems to resonate in current US political debates. Uncompromising opposition to any surrender of US sovereignty to international organizations is increasingly widespread these days, particularly on the right wing of the US political spectrum. The question whether US foreign policy should be unilateral or multilateral is emerging as a salient electoral issue. Many critics of international organizations are deeply troubled, moreover, by what they know of EU politics, which they view as presumptively undemocratic and suspiciously concerned about social issues. Since writings by Euroskeptic British Tories wield a powerful and disproportionate influence on conservative opinion about Europe in the United States, it is fitting that William Cash, a Conservative Member of Parliament, head of the Euroskeptical European Foundation, and a leading public critic of the current terms of British EU membership, joins this symposium.2 Their arguments-a common position that I shall term conservative idealism -are worth exploring in detail because they are typical of much contemporary Anglo-American thinking about the EU
Reason and Eros in the Ascent Passage of the Symposium
The purpose of this paper is limited to examining the roles which reason and eros play in the ascent, and to deal with some related ontological issues. The final vision is not an act of integration and coordination, but the intuiting of an entity not comprehended previously
Classical Insights and Today\u27s World
Professor Moravscik, as President of the Society, was invited to present his views on the current state of classical philosophy at the turn of the millennium. He comments on the role of the History of Philosophy in current education, sketches the work done in classical philosophy during the 20th century, posits Aristotelianism as an antidote for Cartesianism, and recommends a Platonic perspective for epistemology
Ideals and Obligations in Plato\u27s Ethics
This paper has two main claims: First, it will argue that most of what is usually interpreted as Plato\u27s ethics is concerned primarily with the establishing a Substantive Theory of the Good. Secondly, it will be shown that Plato\u27s link between his STG and matters of obligation is a very close one, and cannot be analyzed along either utilitarian or Kantian lines
Is Anybody Still a Realist?
Realism, the oldest and most prominent theoretical paradigm in international relations, is in trouble. The problem is not lack of interest. Realism remains the primary or alternative theory in virtually every major book and article addressing general theories of world politics, particularly in security affairs. Controversies between neorealism and its critics continue to dominate international relations theory debates. Nor is the problem realism’s purported inability to make point predictions. Many specific realist theories are testable, and there remains much global conflict about which realism offers powerful insights. Nor is the problem the lack of empirical support for simple realist predictions, such as recurrent balancing; or the absence of plausible realist explanations of certain salient phenomena, such as the Cold War, the “end of history,” or systemic change in general. Research programs advance, after all, by the refinement and improvement of previous theories to account for anomalies. There can be little doubt that realist theories rightfully retain a salient position in international relations theory.
The central problem is instead that the theoretical core of the realist approach has been undermined by its own defenders--in particular so-called defensive and neoclassical realists--who seek to address anomalies by recasting realism in forms that are theoretically less determinate, less coherent, and less distinctive to realism
Faux Realism: Spin vs. Substance in the Bush Foreign-Policy Doctrine
The Bush administration has coined a foreign-policy doctrine. President George W. Bush, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, and Secretary of State Colin Powell herald the new realism. Think you know what they are up to? OK, then fill in the blank: The new realism is _______. If you find the blank hard to fill, don’t worry; so would most of today\u27s international-relations scholars. Indeed, one fundamental problem with the Bush administration\u27s new doctrine is that realism no longer has any real intellectual coherence
European integration and the social science of EU studies: the disciplinary politics of a subfield
This article takes the 50th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome as an opportunity to reflect upon half a century of academic discourse about the EU and its antecedents. In particular, it illuminates the theoretical analysis of European integration that has developed within political science and international studies broadly defined. It asks whether it is appropriate to map, as might be tempting, the intellectual 'progress' of the field of study against the empirical evolution of its object (European integration/the EU). The argument to be presented here is that while we can, to some extent, comprehend the evolution of academic thinking about the EU as a reflex to critical shifts in the 'real world' of European integration ('externalist' drivers), it is also necessary to understand 'internalist' drivers of theoretical discourse on European integration/the EU. The article contemplates two such 'internalist' components that have shaped and continue to shape the course of EU studies: scholarly contingency (the fact that scholarship does not proceed with free agency, but is bound by various conditions) and disciplinary politics (the idea that the course of academic work is governed by power games and that there are likely significant disagreements about best practice and progress in a field). In terms of EU studies, the thrust of disciplinary politics tends towards an opposition between 'mainstreaming' and 'pluralist versions' of the political science of EU studies. The final section explores how, in the face of emerging monistic claims about propriety in the field, an effective pluralist political science of the EU might be enhanced
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