390 Pages
    by Routledge

    390 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1999, this volume examines how the question of autonomy has come to be of recent interest in political theory. The author argues that autonomy goes deep into the Western consciousness and is a part of our very mode of being. He suggests that while autonomy is not universal, once tasted it becomes ineradicable. Autonomy runs deeper than is often thought and this book shows that while autonomy is unique to Western consciousness and to democracy, it raises and examines the question as to whether autonomy is either universally necessary or necessary to democracy.

    Part 1. Autonomy Bound. 1. A Confusion of Concepts. 2. In the Beginning was Autonomy. 3. Autonomy, Authority and Saying No! 4. For the Soul Has Many Gazes. Part 2. Bounded Autonomy. 5. From Hermeneutics to Anthropology. 6. A World Made By Others. Part 3. Autonomy Unbound. 7. The Informed and Opaque Heart. 8. Between Here and Eternity. 9. Of Fractured Minds and Broken Paradigms. 10. A Tale of Two Cities. 11. Autonomy, Myth, Poesis and the Summum Bonum.

    Biography

    Paul Barry Clarke

    ’...Clarke forges a razor sharp critique of modes of thought forbidding or legislating autonomy and puts in their place an ethics of autonomy which I can only call, acknowledging Nietzsche’s project of going beyond nihilism, post-theological and post post-modernist.’ Glenn Bowman, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK