Lecture Description
With the emergence of democracies in Europe and the New World at the beginning of the nineteenth century, political philosophers began to re-evaluate the relationship between freedom and equality. Tocqueville, in particular, saw the creation of new forms of social power that presented threats to human liberty. His most famous work, Democracy in America, was written for his French countrymen who were still devoted to the restoration of the monarchy and whom Tocqueville wanted to convince that the democratic social revolution he had witnessed in America was equally representative of France's future.
Course Index
- Introduction: What is Political Philosophy?
- Socratic Citizenship: Plato, Apology
- Socratic Citizenship: Plato, Crito
- Philosophers and Kings: Plato, Republic, I-II
- Philosophers and Kings: Plato, Republic, III-IV
- Philosophers and Kings: Plato, Republic, V
- The Mixed Regime and the Rule of Law: Aristotle, Politics, I, III
- The Mixed Regime and the Rule of Law: Aristotle, Politics, IV
- The Mixed Regime and the Rule of Law: Aristotle, Politics, VII
- New Modes and Orders: Machiavelli, The Prince (chaps. 1-12)
- New Modes and Orders: Machiavelli, The Prince (chaps. 13-26)
- The Sovereign State: Hobbes, Leviathan
- The Sovereign State: Hobbes, Leviathan
- The Sovereign State: Hobbes, Leviathan
- Constitutional Government: Locke, Second Treatise (1-5)
- Constitutional Government: Locke, Second Treatise (7-12)
- Constitutional Government: Locke, Second Treatise (13-19)
- Democracy and Participation: Rousseau, Discourse on Inequality (author's preface, part I)
- Democracy and Participation: Rousseau, Discourse on Inequality (part II)
- Democracy and Participation: Rousseau, Social Contract, I-II
- Democratic Statecraft: Tocqueville, Democracy in America
- Democratic Statecraft: Tocqueville, Democracy in America
- Democratic Statecraft: Tocqueville, Democracy in America
- In Defense of Politics
Course Description
This course is intended as an introduction to political philosophy as seen through an examination of some of the major texts and thinkers of the Western political tradition. Three broad themes that are central to understanding political life are focused upon: the polis experience (Plato, Aristotle), the sovereign state (Machiavelli, Hobbes), constitutional government (Locke), and democracy (Rousseau, Tocqueville). The way in which different political philosophies have given expression to various forms of political institutions and our ways of life are examined throughout the course.