Not available in 2024/25
GV302
Key Themes in the History of Political Thought
This information is for the 2024/25 session.
Teacher responsible
Prof Katrin Flikschuh
Availability
This course is available on the BA in Social Anthropology, BSc in History and Politics, BSc in International Social and Public Policy with Politics, BSc in Philosophy, Politics and Economics, BSc in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (with a Year Abroad), BSc in Politics, BSc in Politics and Data Science, BSc in Politics and Economics, BSc in Politics and History, BSc in Politics and International Relations, BSc in Politics and Philosophy and BSc in Social Anthropology. This course is not available as an outside option. This course is available with permission to General Course students.
This course is capped at one group.
Pre-requisites
Students will normally be expected to have taken GV100, ‘Introduction to Political Theory’, or equivalent in a previous year.
Course content
This advanced course treats some of the major themes in the history of western European political thought as drawn from the writings of selected political philosophers of the ancient Greek, Roman, early modern and modern periods. The aim is to analyse and interpret in some depth a selected sub-set of thinkers and topics in order to explore continuities and discontinuities in ethical and political problems and their solutions over time and changing contexts.
Examples of possible themes include: different views on the nature of "man" and the consequences for political agency of different perspectives on human reason; changing conceptions of justice; different views on government and the state's relation to the individual; the historical and socio-political presuppositions behind the different constitutional regimes; the role of religion in politics; changing perspectives on the relationship between life in the family and a life of active citizenship.
This year, we will focus on debates over the relation between reason, morality, and political authority in the works of Aristotle, Hobbes, Hume, Kant, and JS Mill. We shall consider how these different thinkers’ underlying conceptions of practical reasoning informed their views on personhood, morality, political authority, and citizenship. Throughout, we shall consider these thinkers’ abiding influence on contemporary views about the relation between reason, morality, and politics.
Teaching
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