The Open Society and Its Enemies

New One-Volume Edition

Brossura, 808 pagine

Pubblicato il 21 Aprile 2013 da Princeton University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-691-15813-6
ISBN copiato!
Numero OCLC:
820118585

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4 stelle (1 recensione)

An open society provides its citizens with a mechanism for changing government; a closed society doesn't, forcing its citizens to rely on extra-legal revolution. Popper analyzes the open-closed society debate using three exemplars of closed-society advocacy: Plato, Hegel (and wow, does Popper hate on Hegel), and Marx. The main analytical viewpoints are historicist (backward-looking, utopian) motivations for closed societies and rational (forward-looking, empirical) motivations for open societies.

37 edizioni

Review of 'Open society and its enemies.' on 'Goodreads'

4 stelle

One of the best summaries of ancient philosophy I've ever read. Plato gets completely destroyed, and he deserves it.

From chapter 9: «Aestheticism and radicalism must lead us to jettison reason, and to replace it by a desperate hope for political miracles. This irrational attitude which springs from an intoxication with dreams of a beautiful world is what I call Romanticism. It may seek its heavenly city in the past or in the future; it may preach "back to nature" or "forward to a world of love and beauty"; but its appeal is always to our emotions rather than to reason. Even with the best intentions of making heaven on earth it only succeeds in makin it a hell–that hell which man alone prepares for its fellow-men.»