Political philosophy or political theory is the philosophical study of government, addressing questions about the nature, scope, and legitimacy of public agents and institutions and the relationships between them. Its topics include politics, liberty, justice, property, rights, law, and the enforcement of laws by authority: what they are, if they are needed, what makes a government legitimate, what rights and freedoms it should protect, what form it should take, what the law is, and what duties citizens owe to a legitimate government, if any, and when it may be legitimately overthrown, if ever. Political theory also engages questions of a broader scope, tackling the political nature of phenomena and categories such as identity, culture, sexuality, race, wealth, human-nonhuman relations, ethics, religion, and more. Political science, the scientific study of politics, is generally used in the singular, but in French and Spanish the plural (sciences politiques and ciencias políticas, respectively) is used, perhaps a reflection of the discipline's eclectic nature.Political philosophy is a branch of philosophy, but it has also played a major part of political science, within which a strong focus has historically been placed on both the history of political thought and contemporary political theory (from normative political theory to various critical approaches). In the Oxford Handbook of Political Theory (2009), the field is described as: "[...] an interdisciplinary endeavor whose center of gravity lies at the humanities end of the happily still undisciplined discipline of political science ... For a long time, the challenge for the identity of political theory has been how to position itself productively in three sorts of location: in relation to the academic disciplines of political science, history, and philosophy; between the world of politics and the more abstract, ruminative register of theory; between canonical political theory and the newer resources (such as feminist and critical theory, discourse analysis, film and film theory, popular and political culture, mass media studies, neuroscience, environmental studies, behavioral science, and economics) on which political theorists increasingly draw." Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works in the genre political philosophy 28
-
Contact
-
Continuity and Rupture
-
La derecha en la Crisis del Bicentenario
-
Hermeneutic Communism
-
ΜΕΤΑΜΟΡΦΩΣΕΙΣ ΤΗΣ ΣΚΕΨΗΣ
-
Philosophy and Real Politics
-
Anarchy Alive!: Anti-Authoritarian Politics from Practice to Theory
-
Anarchy in the Age of Dinosaurs
-
From Bakunin to Lacan
-
Philosophy and Social Hope
-
L'invention du quotidien
-
Strong Democracy
-
The Ethics of Liberty
-
Social Justice in the Liberal State
-
For a New Liberty
-
Zweites Buch
-
On the Way of Resurrection
-
Now and After
-
Націоналізм
-
Mein Kampf
-
The Foundations of Leninism
-
The Conquest of Bread
-
Perpetual peace
-
The Social Contract
-
Utopia
-
The science of legislation
-
State of Exception
-
Per la riforma elettorale
Works in the genre political philosophy 3
Works in the genre political philosophy 67
- The Social Contract
- Two Treatises of Government
- Political Liberalism
- Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844
- A Theory of Justice
- Réflexions sur la guerre
- Voluntary Socialism
- A Philosophical View of Reform
- Principles of Political Economy
- Political Ideals
- Encyclopedia of Political Theory
- The Republic
- Critique of Hegel's 'Philosophy of Right'
- Siyasatnama
- De re publica
- Civilization and Its Discontents
- Tractatus Politicus
- The Human Cycle
- Political Justice
- Discourse on Voluntary Servitude
- Egalitarianism as a Revolt Against Nature and Other Essays
- History, Labour, and Freedom
- History of Political Philosophy
- Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do?
- Liberty and Nature
- Marx/Engels Collected Works
- Norms of Liberty
- Notes on James Mill
- Philosophical Notebooks
- Reflections on Violence
- The Concept of the Political
- The Phantom Public
- The Philosophical Manifesto of the Historical School of Law
- The Racial Contract
- The Reason of State
- The Public and its Problems
- Literature and Revolution
- The Problem of Political Authority
- Inclusion and Democracy
- Hegemony and Socialist Strategy
- Interpretation and Social Criticism
- Living in the End Times
- The Fourth Political Theory
- Marxism and Freedom: From 1776 Until Today
- Respect for Nature: A Theory of Environmental Ethics
Genre - wd:Q179805