The Reasoning of Unreason : Universalism, Capitalism and Disenlightenment - John Roberts

The Reasoning of Unreason

Universalism, Capitalism and Disenlightenment

By: John Roberts

Hardcover | 23 August 2018

At a Glance

Hardcover


RRP $240.00

$169.90

29%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $42.48 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 25 to 30 business days

The twenty-first century so far has seen the global rise of authoritarian populism, systematic racism, and dogmatic metaphysics. Even though these events demonstrate the growth of an age of 'unreason', in this original and compelling book John Roberts resists the assumption that such thinking displays an unthinking irrationality or loss of reason; instead he asserts that an important feature of modern reactionary politics is that it offers a supposedly convincing integration of the particular and the universal. This move is defined by what Roberts calls the 'reasoning of unreason' and has deep roots in the history of Western thought and politics.

Tracing the dark history of enlightenment-disenlightenment, John Roberts explores 'the reasoning of unreason' across centuries from Aquinas, William of Ockham, the most important treatise on witchcraft Malleus Maleficarum, Locke, Kant, and Count Arthur de Gobineau, to Social Darwinism, Nazism, Carl Schmitt, Leo Strauss, and Friedrich von Hayek. Roberts provides a new set of philosophical-political tools to understand the formation and denigration of the rational subject and the current reinvestment in various forms of political unreason globally.

The Reasoning of Unreason is the first book to draw on the philosophy of reason, political philosophy, political theory and political history, in order to produce a dialectical account of the 'making of reason' internal to the forces of unreason and the limits of reason.

Industry Reviews
John Roberts' The Reasoning of Unreason impressively shows how a contemporary critique of oppression must proceed: It must understand oppression in its own rationality. Roberts therefore analyzes in detail and with a broad historical perspective how the regimes of oppression think - how they reason against reason. Oppression thus becomes recognizable as the oppression of thinking itself: of its emancipatory power of radical universality. A remarkable example of Marx's "true philosophical criticism."

Other Editions and Formats

Paperback

Published: 20th February 2020

More in Social & Political Philosophy

12 Rules for Life : Antidote to Chaos - Jordan B. Peterson

RRP $22.99

$21.90

The Republic : Penguin Classics - Plato

BLACK FRIDAY

RRP $17.99

$10.80

40%
OFF
On Freedom - Timothy Snyder

Paperback

RRP $36.99

$28.50

23%
OFF
Discipline and Punish : The Birth of the Prison - Michel Foucault

RRP $26.99

$20.25

25%
OFF
Science and Representative Democracy : Experts and Citizens - Mauro Dorato
Agamben's Ethics of the Happy Life : Beyond Nihilism and Morality - Ype de Boer
Maurice Blanchot on Poetry and Narrative : Ethics of the Image - Kevin Hart
Social Healing - Ananta Kumar Giri

RRP $83.99

$66.75

21%
OFF
Multicultural Citizenship : Legacy and Critique - Jean-François Caron

RRP $284.00

$200.95

29%
OFF
Meditations : Timeless Classics - Marcus Aurelius
The Communist Manifesto : Penguin Classics - Karl Marx