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The latest book in the Faith in Reason series provides a theological defence of a strand of political liberalism; a strand informed by the theological conviction that the human person is a creature incapable of its own perfection although nonetheless called to and made for this perfection. Insole puts a question mark against easy caricatures of liberalism which tend to describe it as individualistic hubristic and relativist. By attending to figures such as Edmund Burke Lord Acton and John Rawls Insole shows that a passion to protect the individual within liberal institutions arises not from an illusory sense of self-sufficiency but from an insight into our fallen condition characterised by frailty vulnerability yet also from a hope and intimation of redemption and an eternal divine order. Taking up the emphasis Rawls places on the wars of religion in 16th and 17th century Europe as the historical impetus for an emerging political liberalism Insole pays careful attention to the work of Richard Hooker. After attending to this theologico-political seed-bed of liberalism Insole investigates how the notions of 'liberty' employed in England America and France have some quite distinct theological lineages and separates the political liberalism he defends from these over-zealous appropriations that emanate for instance from American Presidents. On the basis of his theological defence he also critiques the Radically Orthodox attempt to leap beyond political liberalism to a more enchanted space showing the Radical Orthodoxy project to be politically nai(-15441)ve utopian and dangerous in ways well understood by the tradition of political liberalism defended.
TITLE: The Politics of Human Frailty
AUTHOR: Chris Insole
SKU: 9780334029571
PUBLISHER: SCM Press
DATE PUBLISHED: 01/06/2004
PLACE PUBLISHED: United Kingdom
PAGES: 288
BINDING: Paperback / softback
LANGUAGE: English
DIMENSIONS: 135 mm x 216 mm