Republicanism and the Good Society PLSC 4369

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Republicanism and the Good Society PLSC 4369 Time: MWF 12-1 Professor: Michael Lusztig Office: Carr Collins Hall 204 Phone: 214 768-3530 Office Hours: M 10:00-12:00;Th 10:00-11:00; and by appointment This course examines one of the most important, yet potentially divisive, concepts of contemporary liberal democracy republicanism. It traces the roots of republicanism from its ancient origins, through the English Commonwealth Era, the American Founding. We will discuss the republican values of virtue, corruption and fate, and show how these have been reconciled with liberalism. Finally, we shall demonstrate that republicanism has the potential to sow the seeds of intercommunity discord. 5-6 page paper proposal and annotated bibliography* due Oct 22** 20% 15 page term paper due Nov 16** 25% Mid term exam Oct 12 25% Professionalism 5% Final Exam Dec 10 (3:00-6:00) 25% * The paper proposal and annotated bibliography should take at least 3 weeks to research. The proposal will constitute the outline for your term paper, and should be roughly 2-3 pages long. Note that you will not be expected to have completed the research for your term paper, but should have made enough of a start to give me a good idea about the direction in which you will be heading. The annotated bibliography will be appended to the proposal. It will contain two-paragraph discussions about the six most important sources used in your research to date. The first paragraph will constitute a summary of the book or article. The second will describe why the source is important for your research. A good proposal and bibliography will make it much easier for you to write, and do well on, your term paper. ** Late assignments lose three points per day (including weekends). Assignments that are more than one week late will not be accepted. In the interest of fairness, no excuses (barring documented illness, injury, or family emergency) will be accepted. Professionalism Part of my job is to assess your predicted performance in the work place or graduate school. This professionalism grade will be affected by tardiness to class, disruptive behavior such as reading or talking during class, and failure to keep or come on time to scheduled appointments. Blackboard You will be expected to sign up for Blackboard. A full list of my policies and your responsibilities is available there, as are tips, resources, and announcements. Please be sure to modify your profile to receive emails to your preferred address. It is your responsibility to ensure that your email address is correct.

Attendance: I expect complete and regular attendance. In part, your participation and professionalism grades depend upon it. In addition, students who miss class without a bona fide (and documentable) reason will lose one percent of their overall grade per each class missed. Bona fide excuses include illness, injury, family emergency, important family events (not including vacation plans), universitysanctioned extra-curricular events, and religious observation (for this a letter in advance suffices). The imperative to study for a killer midterm, or like attempts, will not suffice. It is your responsibility to let me know about events that occur as quickly as possible. Term Paper: Your term paper will oblige you to select a concept that has to do with republicanism and/or liberalism and compare the treatment of that concept by two philosophers. Relevant concepts include, but are not restricted to, virtue, liberty, fate, corruption, faith, social contract, natural law, and justice. Plagiarism: Plagiarism is not a game, although many students treat it as such. You cheat, get caught, what s the worst thing that could happen? A stern talking to? Failing the paper? You can probably keep a straight face during the stern talking to. Heck, maybe you could even squeeze out a tear. And you might have failed anyway, so why not give it a try? Actually, failing the paper is the best thing that could happen, and it is not very likely. Far more likely is that I will fail you for the course. If the case is egregious, or if you extend the game to trying actively to deceive me, then the best thing that could happen is that when the Honor Council finds you guilty, you don t get expelled from SMU, but instead only have an HV (honor s violation) on your transcript for three years after you graduate. If you want to play the game, please be very clear on what happens when you lose. Plagiarism is defined by Southern Methodist University according to Alexander Lindley s (1957,2) definition: Plagiarism is the false assumption of authorship: the wrongful act of taking the product of another person s mind, and presenting it as one s own. Plagiarism may take the form of repeating another s sentences as your own, adopting a particularly apt phrase as your own, or even presenting someone else s line of thinking in the development of a thesis as though it were your own. In short, to plagiarize is to give the impression that you have written or thought something that you have in fact borrowed from another. If you have any questions regarding citation, please see me. While I am not looking for excuses to accuse you of plagiarism, and therefore you need not be worried about honest mistakes, you should be aware that the following excuses will not work: I didn t know that I had to use quotation marks when I borrowed someone else s prose. I used footnotes, I just didn t use quotation marks. But I changed every fourth word I didn t realize that I couldn t turn in the same paper for more than one class. I didn t know how to reference internet sources, so I just pretended the words and ideas were my own. I thought that since you said it in class, that I could take this idea and take credit for it as my own intellectual property.

Disability Accommodations: If you need academic accommodations for a disability, you must first contact Ms. Rebecca Marin, Coordinator, Services for Students with Disabilities (214-768-4563) to verify the disability and to establish eligibility for accommodations. Then you should schedule an appointment with me to make appropriate arrangements. The readings from this course will be from the following books (available at the Bookstore) and from online sources. All items accessible through PONI can also be searched and accessed via Google Scholar. Iseult Honohan, Civic Republicanism Routledge, 2002 Vickie Sullivan, Machiavelli, Hobbes, and the Formation of a Liberal Republicanism in England Cambridge, 2004 Section One: Introduction Week One August 24 The End of History Francis Fukuyama, Reflections on the End of History Five Years Later, History and Theory 34 (1995) (access through PONI). Week Two August 27 August 29 August 31 Week Three September 5 September 7 America Alone Liberty and Community Republican Values Platonic Virtue Aristotelian Virtue Peter G. Peterson, Gray Dawn: The Global Aging Crisis, Foreign Affairs Jan/Feb 1999 (access through www.foreignaffairs.org). Honohan, Introduction; ch.1. Plato, The Republic, bk.ii (access through www.classics.mit.edu). Aristotle, The Nicomachean Ethics, bk.ii (access through www.classics.mit.edu). Week Four September 10 September 12 September 14 Roman Virtue Fate and the Stoics Fate and the Christians Peter Olsthoorn, Honor as a Motive for Making Sacrifices, Journal of Military Ethics 4 (2005) (access through PONI). W.R. Newell, How Original is Machiavelli? A Consideration of Skinner s Interpretation of Virtue and Fortune, Political Theory 15 (1987) (access through PONI).

Week Five September 17 September 19 September 21 The Renaissance and the Reformation Bodin and Sovereignty Machiavelli and the Rebirth of Classical Republicanism WA Dunning, Jean Bodin on Sovereignty: With Some Reference to the Doctrine of Thomas Hobbes, Political Science Quarterly 11 (1896) (access through PONI). Sullivan, ch.1. Week Six September 24 September 26 September 28 Machiavelli, Corruption and Fate Liberal Republicanism England and the Political Impact of the Reformation SM Shumer, Machiavelli: Republican Politics and its Corruption, Political Theory 7 (1979) (access through PONI). Sullivan, Introduction. Honohan, ch.2. Week Seven October 1 October 3 October 5 England and the Ideological Impact of the Reformation Civil War Liberal Humanism: Hobbes Sullivan, ch.2. Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, chs.17-18 (access through www.constitution.org). Week Eight October 8 October 10 October 12 Liberal Humanism: Locke Review Midterm John Locke, Second Treatise of Civil Government chs.2;7 (access through www.constitution.org). Week Nine October 15 October 17 October 19 Civic Humanism: Harrington and an Empire of Laws The Term Paper: Expectations and Strategies Court and Country Locke, chs.8;9. Sullivan, ch.4.

Week Ten October 22 October 24 October 26 The Material World The Evolution of Liberal Republicanism: Trenchard and Gordon The Evolution of Liberal Republicanism: Montesquieu Honahan, ch.6. Sullivan, ch.7. John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, Cato s Letters no.31 (access through oll.libertyfund.org). Week Eleven October 29 October 31 November 2 The American Republic: Structure The American Republic: Faction Fractured Liberal Republicanism Honohan, ch.5. Trenchard and Gordon, no.33. James Madison, The Federalist Papers nos.10;51 (access through www.foundingfathers.info). Week Twelve November 5 November 7 November 9 Neo-Classical Liberal Republicanism: America s God Neo-Classical Liberal Republicanism: It s Not My Fault You re Poor Charles Crowe, Bishop James Madison and the Republic of Virtue, Journal of Southern History 30 (1964) (access through PONI). Rhys Williams, Visions of the Good Society and the Religious Roots of America s Political Culture, Sociology of Religion 60 (1999) (access through PONI). Week Thirteen November 12 Egalitarian Liberal Republicanism, Redistribution and the Rule of Law November 14 Egalitarian Liberal Republicanism and the Welfare State November 16 Egalitarian Liberal Republicanism: Rawls and Justice John Rawls, Justice as Fairness, The Philosophical Review 67 (1958) (access through PONI). Ronald Inglehart, The Silent Revolution in Europe: Intergenerational Change in Post-Industrial Societies, American Political Science Review 65 (1971) (access through PONI). Week Fourteen November 26 Cognitive Liberal Republicanism: The Politics of Recognition November 28 Cognitive Liberal Republicanism: Multiculturalism November 30 Slouching Towards Gomorrah? Honahan, chs.4;7.

Week Fifteen December 3 December 5 December 6 Virtue, Liberty and Justice A Tough Act to Balance America (Still) Alone Review Chandran Kukathas, Liberalism and Multiculturalism: The Politics of Indifference, Political Theory 26 (1998) (access through PONI).