The World and Us
Roberto Mangabeira Unger
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
"A restless visionary striving to realize the highest aspirations of modernity itself."-New York Times A radical re-envisioning of the human condition by the acclaimed Brazilian philosopher In The World and Us, Roberto Mangabeira Unger sets out to reinvent philosophy. His central theme is our transcendence, everything in our existence points beyond itself, and its relation to our finitude: everything that surrounds us, and we ourselves, are flawed and ephemeral. He asks how we can live so that we die only once, instead of dying many small deaths; how we can breathe new life and new meaning into the revolutionary movement that has aroused humanity for the last three centuries, but that is now weakened and disoriented; and how we can make sense of ourselves without claiming for human beings a miraculous exception to the general regime of nature. For Unger, philosophy must be the mind on fire, insisting on our prerogative to speak to what matters most. From this perspective, he redefines each of the traditional parts of philosophy, from ontology and epistemology to ethics and politics. He turns moral philosophy into an exploration of the contest between the two most powerful contemporary moral visions: an ethic of self-fashioning and non-conformity, and an ethic of human connection and responsibility. And he turns political philosophy into a program of deep freedom, showing how to democratize the market economy, energize democratic politics, and give the individual worker and citizen the means to flourish amid permanent innovation.
Product Details
Price
$44.95
$41.80
Publisher
Verso
Publish Date
February 27, 2024
Pages
640
Dimensions
5.9 X 9.0 X 1.9 inches | 1.8 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781804292655
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Roberto Mangabeira Unger is one of the leading philosophers and social thinkers in the world today. He is active in Brazilian public life and has served twice as Brazil's Minister of Strategic Affairs, charged with developing initiatives that signal a direction for his country. A polymath, he has written widely in legal, political, economic, and moral theory as well as in natural philosophy. Among his major writings are Passion: An Essay on Personality, a modernist view of human nature; False Necessity, a radical alternative to Marxist social theory; and, most recently, The Knowledge Economy, a study of the unrealized potential of the new vanguard of production. The World and Us is the capstone of his lifework.
Reviews
"A restless visionary striving to realize the highest aspirations of modernity itself"
--William Connolly, New York Times "One of the few living philosophers whose thinking has the range of the great philosophers of the past."
--Times Higher Education "Unger stakes out new discursive space that is neither simply left nor liberal, Marxist nor Lockean, anarchist nor Kantian . . . an emancipatory experimentalism toward ever-increasing democracy and individual freedom"
--Cornel West "Here something new has occurred: a philosophical mind out of the Third World turning the tables, to become synoptist and seer of the First."
--Perry Anderson "What makes Unger different is his orientation toward the future rather than the past--his hopefulness."
--Richard Rorty "Unger insists on the need to refocus on what really matters, the human spirit."
--John Paul Rathbone, Financial Times "Brazil's answer to John Stuart Mill. A political philosopher extraordinaire."
--Chronicle of Higher Education "Through a 49-year career spanning politics, law, social and political theory and philosophy, Unger has put forward a collection of searching inquiries meant to pierce the liberal mythos of necessary progress. Across dozens of books, including the recently published metaphysical tome The World and Us, the Brazilian philosopher has tried to think beyond 20th-century categories through a series of questions."
--Samuel McIlhagga, UnHerd "The World and Us ruminates deeply while maintaining a readability often lacking in specialized, academic philosophy. Unger has written a book for the rest of us, after all. If he seeks our understanding, it's only so we might enjoy a better life ahead."
--Michael Maiello, The Washington Independent Review of Books
--William Connolly, New York Times "One of the few living philosophers whose thinking has the range of the great philosophers of the past."
--Times Higher Education "Unger stakes out new discursive space that is neither simply left nor liberal, Marxist nor Lockean, anarchist nor Kantian . . . an emancipatory experimentalism toward ever-increasing democracy and individual freedom"
--Cornel West "Here something new has occurred: a philosophical mind out of the Third World turning the tables, to become synoptist and seer of the First."
--Perry Anderson "What makes Unger different is his orientation toward the future rather than the past--his hopefulness."
--Richard Rorty "Unger insists on the need to refocus on what really matters, the human spirit."
--John Paul Rathbone, Financial Times "Brazil's answer to John Stuart Mill. A political philosopher extraordinaire."
--Chronicle of Higher Education "Through a 49-year career spanning politics, law, social and political theory and philosophy, Unger has put forward a collection of searching inquiries meant to pierce the liberal mythos of necessary progress. Across dozens of books, including the recently published metaphysical tome The World and Us, the Brazilian philosopher has tried to think beyond 20th-century categories through a series of questions."
--Samuel McIlhagga, UnHerd "The World and Us ruminates deeply while maintaining a readability often lacking in specialized, academic philosophy. Unger has written a book for the rest of us, after all. If he seeks our understanding, it's only so we might enjoy a better life ahead."
--Michael Maiello, The Washington Independent Review of Books