PLSC 118A, THE MORAL FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICS

Similar documents
PLSC 118B, THE MORAL FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICS

PLSC 118B, THE MORAL FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICS

Political Science 103 Spring, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Political Science 103 Fall, 2015 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

POL 10a: Introduction to Political Theory Spring 2017 Room: Golding 101 T, Th 2:00 3:20 PM

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY Department of Political Studies POLS 350 History of Political Thought 1990/91 Fall/Winter

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

The Social Contract Class Syllabus

PH 3022 SOCIAL AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY UK LEVEL 5 UK CREDITS: 15 US CREDITS: 3/0/3

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

Theories of Social Justice

Pol 392: Democratic Theory

Problems in Contemporary Democratic Theory

PH/PS 202: History of Western Political Thought II

Jane Mansbridge, Adams Professor, KSG Semester: Spring 2009 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:10 2:30 p.m.

Political Ideas from the Early Modern Age to the Digital Revolution

History of Western Political Thought

University of Montana Department of Political Science

Public Opinion and Democratic Theory

PS 209, Spring 2016: Introduction to Political Theory. Tuesday/Thursday 11:00-12:15, 19 Ingraham Hall

Introduction to Political Thought

Philosophy 221/Political Science 221 Philosophical Foundations of the American Revolution

Poli MWF: 2:30-3: Hodges Hall Instructor: Mr. Alex D. Cole Office Hours - MWF 12:30-2:15 - Stubbs 324

GOVT / PHIL 206A WI: Political Theory Spring 2014 Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays 9:20-10:20 A.M. Hepburn Hall Room 011

ENROLLMENT, WRITTEN WORK, AND REQUIREMENTS:

IS303 Origins of Political Economy

Political Libertarianism and its Critics. Distributive Justice, Rational Choice, and Public Goods

PHIL 28 Ethics & Society II

Classics of Political Economy POLS 1415 Spring 2013

Days/Time/Classroom: MW/3:00-4:15 PM/BUSAD D201

Modern Europe, : Writing Intensive Section

GREAT POLITICAL THINKERS

Barnard College Fall 2015 Department of Economics Economics BC3041: Theoretical Foundations of Political Economy

Sharon Gill. PHI 335: The Individual and Society. Approved by Undergraduate Council 2/1/2011. Prof. David Bradshaw Office: Patterson 1405

READING LIST FOR COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION IN POLITICAL THEORY. Department of Political Science Columbia University

GE 21A: History of Social Thought Fall 2004 Professors Rogers Brubaker, Vincent Pecora, Russell Jacoby, and Kirstie McClure

Department of Political Science Fall, Political Science 306 Contemporary Democratic Theory Peter Breiner

Introduction to Political Theory Fall Semester, 2011 L32 106

PHIL : Social and Political Philosophy , Term 1: M/W/F: 12-1pm in DMP 301 Instructor: Kelin Emmett

Democracy and Justice

Department of Politics Office: Room 303 Fall 2016 Office hours: Wed. 10:30-11:30

POLITICAL SCIENCE. PS 0200 AMERICAN POLITICAL PROCESS 3 cr. PS 0211 AMERICAN SYSTEM OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE 3 cr. PS 0300 COMPARATIVE POLITICS 3 cr.

JUSTICE IN DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY

EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SPRING

MODERN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY (Autumn Term, 2014)

Social and Political Philosophy

POL 190B: Democratic Theory Spring 2017 Room: Shiffman Humanities Ctr 125 W, 2:00 4:50 PM

B DEMOCRACY: A READER. Edited by Ricardo Blaug and John Schwarzmantel EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS

DUKE UNIVERSITY. Department of Political Science

ENROLLMENT, WRITTEN WORK, AND REQUIREMENTS:

Social and Political Philosophy Philosophy 4470/6430, Government 4655/6656 (Thursdays, 2:30-4:25, Goldwin Smith 348) Topic for Spring 2011: Equality

II. NUMBER OF TIMES THE COURSE MAY BE TAKEN FOR CREDIT: One

Instructor: Kaarin Michaelsen. "Modern Europe, "

PLSC 408 /EP&E400/ MGT 660: Capitalism as a Political Order Yale University, Fall Wednesday 3:30-5:20pm, RKZ 102

Kenneth Einar Himma Winter 2014 (Tuesday & Thursday, Room 441, 1:30 p.m. 3:20 p.m. Friday, April 12, April 26, 1:30 p.m. 10:20 p.m.

Theories of Justice. Is economic inequality unjust? Ever? Always? Why?

"Modern Europe, "

ID 351: Perspectives on Inequality

PHIL 240 Introduction to Political Philosophy

Social and Political Ethics, 7.5 ECTS Autumn 2016

American Politics Political Science 101 Spring 2004

25.4 Reforming the Industrial World. The Industrial Revolution leads to economic, social, and political reforms.

Jan Narveson and James P. Sterba

ECON 4270 Distributive Justice Lecture 10: Libertarianism. Marxism

Democratic Theory. Wednesdays, 3:30-6:00pm Room: 1115 BSB

SOC 203Y1Y History of Social Theory. SS 2117 (Sidney Smith Hall), 100 St. George Street

Political Theory. Political theorist Hannah Arendt, born in Germany in 1906, fled to France in 1933 when the Nazis came to power.

COURSE INFORMATION SHEET

McLane Teammates Reading Program The Role of Government in a Free Society Fall 2018 Reading Schedule

Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

January 31 A) Concept of a Profession Cogan, Morris L.,"Toward a Definition of

GOV 312P: Constitutional Principles: Core Texts Honors Unique #38750 MWF 2-3, MEZ 2.124

John Rawls. Cambridge University Press John Rawls: An Introduction Percy B. Lehning Frontmatter More information

Pos 500 Seminar in Political Theory: Political Theory and Equality Peter Breiner

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF LAW THEORIES OF JUSTICE SEMINAR PROF. SYLVIA WAIRIMU KANG ARA SPRING 2011

WWS 300 DEMOCRACY. Spring Robertson Hall 428 Robertson Hall Ph: Ph:

Marxism. Lecture 7 Liberalism John Filling

Test Series: Political Science & International Relations (Optional) UPSC - Civil Services Examination Online / Offline

Topics in Political Thought I: Democratic Theory POL 484H (F) Fall 2006, University of Toronto

Theories and Methods in the Humanities: Rethinking Violence IPH 405

Political Science 771 Modern Political Thought Fall 2010 Tuesday, 3:30pm to 5:45pm, 115 Murphey

Course Description. Course objectives

POLITICAL SCIENCE. PS 0200 AMERICAN POLITICS 3 cr. PS 0211 AMERICAN SYSTEM OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE 3 cr. PS 0300 COMPARATIVE POLITICS 3 cr.

THEORIES OF POLITICAL ECONOMY: FROM SMITH TO SACHS MORSE ACADEMIC PLAN TEXTS AND IDEAS. 53 Washington Square South

Economic Perspective. Macroeconomics I ECON 309 S. Cunningham

LGST 226: Markets, Morality, and Capitalism Robert Hughes Fall 2016 Syllabus

Political Ideologies and the Democratic Ideal

COURSE OUTLINES AND TEACHING AIDS BY JOHN GUEGUEN,

Ethics and Public Policy. Government / Public Policy 42 Spring 2016 Dartmouth College

Comparative Political Revolutions

Texts & Ideas: Mixed Constitutions CORE-UA Tuesday/Thursday, 2:00-3:15 PM Location: Meyer 121

GOVT International Relations Theory Credits: 3 (NR)

Modern Political Thinkers and Ideas

Political Science 423 DEMOCRATIC THEORY. Thursdays, 3:30 6:30 pm, Foster 305. Patchen Markell University of Chicago Spring 2000

POLITICS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

Political Legitimacy. 1. Descriptive and Normative Concepts of Legitimacy 2. The Function of Political Legitimacy

Philosophy 267 Fall, 2010 Professor Richard Arneson Introductory Handout revised 11/09 Texts: Course requirements: Week 1. September 28.

Welcome back to WHAP! Thursday 2/15/18

MGT610 2 nd Quiz solved by Masoodkhan before midterm spring 2012

Transcription:

Revised 08-21-2013 PLSC 118A, THE MORAL FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICS Yale University, Fall 2013 Ian Shapiro Lectures Tuesday and Thursday 10:30-11:20 am Whitney Humanities Center Auditorium Office hours: Wednesdays, 9:30 to 11:30 am Or by appointment with Barbara.papacoda@yale.edu 110 Luce Hall, 34 Hillhouse When do governments deserve our allegiance, and when should they be denied it? This course explores the main answers that have been given to this question in the modern West. We start with a survey of the major political theories of the Enlightenment: Utilitarianism, Marxism, and the social contract tradition. In each case we begin with a look of classical formulations, locating them in historical context, but then shift to the contemporary debates as they relate to politics today. Next we turn to the rejection of Enlightenment political thinking, again exploring both classical and contemporary formulations. The last part of the course deals with the nature of, and justifications for, democratic politics, and their relations to Enlightenment and Anti-Enlightenment political thinking. In addition to exploring theoretical differences among the various authors discussed, considerable attention is devoted to the practical implications of their competing arguments. To this end, we discuss a variety of concrete problems, including debates about economic inequality, affirmative action and the distribution of health care, the limits of state power in the regulation of speech and religion, and difficulties raised by the emerging threat of global environmental decay. There are no prerequisites. REQUIREMENTS Regular Students: Midterm in class October 22 (30%,); Final (50%); section participation (20%). Writing-intensive students: Papers (50%); in-class final (30%); section participation (20%). Paper length 2,500-3000 words. Due dates: Paper 1 Rough draft: Oct 10 Final draft: Oct 31 Paper 2 Rough draft: Nov 12 Final draft: Dec 5 KEY YB = On sale at the Yale Bookstore on Broadway Street R = In reader, on sale at Tyco on Elm Street B = On reserve at Bass Library If a reading is hyperlinked, it is available on ereserves; click and log in using your Net ID. (Some links require you to be on the Yale network; if off campus, connect using VPN).

COURSE SYLLABUS AND SCHEDULE OF CLASSES Thursday, August 29 Informational and housekeeping session Tuesday, September 3 Introductory lecture Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, Chs. 1-8, 13-15 (YB, B) Arendt, Eichmann, the rest I. ENLIGHTENMENT POLITICAL THEORY Thursday, September 5 (All sections start this week) Natural law roots of the enlightenment Descartes, Discourse on the Method Parts 2 and 4 and Principles of Philosophy Part I, Items 1-8 in The Philosophical Writings of Descartes Vol.1 (R, B) John Locke, Second Treatise of Government, Chs. I-V (YB, B) Locke, First Treatise of Government, I-III, IX-XI (YB, B) Ian Shapiro, Moral Foundations of Politics, Ch. 1 (YB, B) II. UTILITARIANISM: CLASSICAL AND NEOCLASSICAL Tuesday, September 10 Origins of classical utilitarianism Jeremy Bentham, Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, Chs. 1-3, 7 (R, B) Bentham, Introduction, Chs. 5, 6 Thursday, September 12 Classical utilitarianism and distributive justice Bentham, The Psychology of Economic Man in Jeremy Bentham s Economic Writings, Vol. 3 (R, B) Elie Halévy, The Growth of Philosophic Radicalism, Part I Chs.1 & 3 and Part II Chs. 1-3 (B) Shapiro, Moral Foundations of Politics, Ch. 2 (YB, B) 2

Tuesday, September 17 From classical to neoclassical utilitarianism John Stuart Mill, On Liberty, Chs. 1-2 (YB, B) Shapiro, Moral Foundations of Politics, Ch. 3 (YB, B) Thursday, September 19 The neoclassical synthesis of rights and utility Mill, On Liberty, Chs. 3-4 (YB, B) Mill, Utilitarianism, Chs. 1-3 (B) Tuesday, September 24 Limits of the neoclassical synthesis Mill, On Liberty, Ch. 5 (YB, B) Mill, Utilitarianism, Chs 4-5 (B) III. MARXISM, ITS FAILURES AND ITS LEGACY Note: Page numbers for Marx readings are from The Marx-Engels Reader, ed. Tucker (YB, B). Thursday, September 26 The Marxian challenge Marx and Engels, Manifesto of the Communist Party, pp. 469-500. Marx, Theses on Feuerbach, pp. 143-5. Marx and Engels, The German Ideology, Part I, pp. 146-202 Tuesday, October 1 Marx s theory of capitalism and exploitation Marx, Capital, Vol. I, pp. 294-302, 329-344 Marx, Critique of the Gotha Program, pp. 525-41 Marx, Capital, Vol. I, 303-328, 361-84, 417-19. Useful summaries of the analytical logic of Capital are Ernest Mandel s introduction to the Viking/Pelican edition of Capital, vol. I and Pierre Jalee, How Capitalism Works. Thursday, October 3 The Marxian failure and legacy Marx, Crisis Theory (Ch XVII of Theories of Surplus Value), pp. 443-65 J. Roemer, Should Marxists be interested in exploitation? Analytical Marxism (R) 3

Shapiro, Moral Foundations of Politics, Ch. 4 (YB, B) IV. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT TRADITION Tuesday, October 8 Secularizing natural law Locke, First Treatise of Government, Chs. I-IV. (YB, B) Locke, Second Treatise of Government, Chs. V-X. (YB, B) Kant, Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals, 2nd Section (esp. 37-49) (R, O) Allen Wood What is Kantian Ethics? in Kant, Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals (Yale University Press, 2002) (R) Thursday, October 10 The Rawlsian social contract John Rawls, A Theory of Justice, Ch. 1 4; Ch. 2 11-12 and 14-15 (YB, B) Rawls, A Theory of Justice, Ch. 1 1-3; Ch.2 13 and 16-17 Tuesday, October 15 Distributive justice and the welfare state Rawls, Theory..., Ch. 3 20-22, 24-26, 29-30; Ch. 4 40 Rawls, Theory..., Ch. 3 23 and 27; Ch.5 41-43, Ch. 9 79 Nozick, Anarchy, State and Utopia, pp. 183-231 (YB, B) Shapiro, Moral Foundations of Politics, Ch.5 (YB, B) Thursday, October 17 The political-not-metaphysical legacy Rawls, Justice as fairness: political not metaphysical. Philosophy & Public Affairs 14 (1985): 223-51 (R) Shapiro, Justice and Workmanship in a Democracy in Democracy s Place (R, B) Tuesday, October 22: MIDTERM EXAM IN CLASS (October Recess: Tuesday, October 22 Sunday, October 27) Tuesday, October 29 The Nozickian minimal state Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State and Utopia, Chs. 1-3 (YB, B) 4

Thursday, October 31 Rights-as-side constraints and the minimal state Nozick, Anarchy... Ch. 4 Nozick, Anarchy... Chs. 5, 8-10 Tuesday, November 5 Compensation versus redistribution Nozick, Anarchy..., Chs. 6 & 7, pp. 149-64 & 167-82 V. ANTI-ENLIGHTENMENT POLITICS Thursday, November 7 [Visiting Professor, David Bromwich] The Burkean outlook Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (Yale University Press), pp. 3-45, 77-83 (YB, B) Patrick Devlin, Morals and the Criminal Law (R) David Bromwich, Introduction to Burke, in On Empire, Liberty, and Reform (R, B). Burke, Reflections (YB, B), the rest. Tuesday, November 12 Contemporary communitarianism Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue, Chs. 1-3, 5 (YB, B) MacIntyre, After Virtue, Chs. 4 & 6-8 Thursday, November 14 Contemporary communitarianism MacIntyre, After Virtue, Chs. 9, 14 MacIntyre, After Virtue, Chs. 10-12, 13, 15-19 Shapiro, Moral Foundations of Politics, Ch. 6 (YB, B) VI. DEMOCRACY Tuesday, November 19 Republicanism vs. democracy Hamilton, Jay, and Madison, The Federalist Papers. Ed. Shapiro (Yale Press, 2009). Papers No. 1, 9, 10 14, 39, 48, 51, 62, 70, 78. (YB, O.) May use other editions. Ibid. Papers No. 15, 16, 17, 23, 47, 49, 55, 58, 63, 84, 85. John Dunn, Unmanifest Destiny, in The Federalist Papers, ed. Shapiro. 5

Horowitz, The Federalist Abroad in the World, in Federalist Papers, ed. Shapiro. Thursday, November 21 In Search of the General Will Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, Book I Ch. 6-7, Book II Ch. 3 (R) William H. Riker, Ch. 5, The Meaning of Social Choice in Liberalism against Populism (R), pp. 115-23 only. Jürgen Habermas, Three Normative Models of Democracy (R) James Fishkin, Deliberative Polling: Toward a Better-Informed Democracy (R) Shapiro, The State of Democratic Theory, Ch.1 (B) James Fishkin, The Voice of the People or his online lecture on deliberative democracy. William H. Riker, Ch. 5, The Meaning of Social Choice in Liberalism against Populism (R), the rest. (November Recess: Saturday, November 23 Sunday, December 1) Tuesday, December 3 Majority rule Locke, Second Treatise of Government, Chs. X, XVII-XIX (YB, B) Joseph Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy, Ch. XXI and XXII (R) Buchanan and Tullock, The Calculus of Consent, excerpt from Ch.6 (R) Shapiro, John Locke s Democratic Theory, in Locke s Two Treatises of Government (YB, B) Shapiro, The State of Democratic Theory, Ch. 2-3 (B) and Ch. 5 (R, B) Douglas Rae, The Limits of Consensual Decision, APSR, 1975, 69:4. Thursday, December 5 Final lecture: Democracy, Science, and Rights Shapiro, Democracy s Place, Ch.8 (R, B) Shapiro, Moral Foundations of Politics, Ch. 7-8 (YB, B) (Reading Period: Friday, December 6 Wednesday, December 11) Review session will be scheduled during reading week. 6