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By Jack Lively
First published in 1975, and long out of print, Jack Lively’s Democracy is a welcome addition to the European Consortium for Political Research’s series of classic reprints. In a brief and accessible fashion, Lively set out to clarify the meaning and ends of democracy, in the face of what he saw as the proliferation of claims to the title made by elitists such as Schumpeter and communists such as Macpherson and the Soviet states… it remains an excellent example of how to write a short and clear book on a large and confusing topic, fully befitting its ‘classic’ status and a worthy read for anyone interested in the development of democratic thought during the twentieth century. -- Ben Saunders, 'Political Studies Review'
Jack Lively's central concerns in political theory were the study of Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment thought, in particular the study of democracy, and the defence of liberal values of rational political engagement and ameliorative social policy. Political theory was to be pursued by combining political realism with moral seriousness. He wished to resist (once?) fashionable ideas about the death of liberalism, the impossibility of rational political discourse, and the allegedly crippling relativity of morality.
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