Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- What's Morality Got to Do With It? Making the Right Distinctions
- Unauthorized Humanitarian Intervention
- Thinking Constitutionally: The Problem of Deliberative Democracy
- Representing Ignorance
- Dual Citizenship and American Democracy: Patriotism, National Attachment, and National Identity
- Policy Implications of Zero Discounting: An Exploration in Politics and Morality
- Reflections on Espionage
- Mr. Pinocchio Goes to Washington: Lying in Politics
- A Subject of Distaste; An Object of Judgment
- Against Civic Schooling
- Political Morality as Convention
- Autonomy and Empathy
- God's Image and Egalitarian Politics
- Should political Liberals Be Compassionate Conservatives? Philosophical Foundations of the Faith-Based Initiative
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- What's Morality Got to Do With It? Making the Right Distinctions
- Unauthorized Humanitarian Intervention
- Thinking Constitutionally: The Problem of Deliberative Democracy
- Representing Ignorance
- Dual Citizenship and American Democracy: Patriotism, National Attachment, and National Identity
- Policy Implications of Zero Discounting: An Exploration in Politics and Morality
- Reflections on Espionage
- Mr. Pinocchio Goes to Washington: Lying in Politics
- A Subject of Distaste; An Object of Judgment
- Against Civic Schooling
- Political Morality as Convention
- Autonomy and Empathy
- God's Image and Egalitarian Politics
- Should political Liberals Be Compassionate Conservatives? Philosophical Foundations of the Faith-Based Initiative
- Index
Summary
Since the ancients, philosophers, theologians, and political actors have pondered the relationship between the moral realm and the political realm. Complicating the long debate over the intersection of morality and politics are diverse conceptions of fundamental concepts: the right and the good, justice and equality, personal liberty and public interest. Divisions abound, also, about whether politics should be held to a higher moral standard at all, or whether, instead, pragmatic considerations or realpolitik should be the final word. Perhaps the two poles are represented most conspicuously by Aristotle and Machiavelli. For Aristotle, the proper aim of politics is moral virtue: “politics takes the greatest care in making the citizens to be of a certain sort, namely good and capable of noble actions.” Thus, the statesman is a craftsman or scientist who designs a legal system that enshrines universal principles, and the politician's task is to maintain and reform the system when necessary. The science of the political includes more than drafting good laws and institutions, however, since the city-state must create a system of moral education for its citizens. In marked contrast, Machiavelli's prince exalted pragmatism over morality, the maintenance of power over the pursuit of justice. Machiavelli instructed that “a prince, and especially a new prince, cannot observe all those things which are considered good in men, being often obliged, in order to maintain the state, to act against faith, against charity, against humanity, and against religion.”
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- Chapter
- Information
- Morality and Politics , pp. vii - xvPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004