Chapter
Open Access
6 NOZICK’S META-UTOPIA AS AN OPEN SOCIETY
-
Avery Fox White
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction: Open Society Unresolved: Charting the Contested Terrain 1
-
PART I. Philosophical and Theoretical Perspectives on Open Society
- 1 HUMAN NATURE AND THE OPEN SOCIETY 23
- 2 IN PRAISE OF COLDNESS: THE OPEN NEIGHBORHOOD AND ITS ENEMIES 38
- 3 AGAINST IDENTITY: INDIVIDUALITY AS THE FOUNDATION OF OPEN SOCIETY 48
- 4 EMPIRICAL EMBODIMENT OF CRITICAL RATIONALISM: DELIBERATIVE THEORY AND OPEN SOCIETY 59
- 5 OPEN SOCIETY AS AN ACHIEVEMENT: POPPER, GAUS, AND THE LIBERAL TRADITION 72
- 6 NOZICK’S META-UTOPIA AS AN OPEN SOCIETY 83
- 7 HANNAH ARENDT AND LITERARY PEDAGOGY 94
- 8 CAN BERGSON’S DEFINITION OF OPEN SOCIETY BE USEFUL TODAY? 105
-
PART II National and Regional Perspectives on Open Society
- 9 THE GENDER OF ILLIBERALISM: NEW TRANSNATIONAL ALLIANCES AGAINST OPEN SOCIETIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE 117
- 10 OPEN SOCIETY CONTESTED: LIBERAL UNIVERSALISM VERSUS AUTOCRATIC FUNCTIONALISM IN HONG KONG 132
- 11 “SOROSOIDS”: USES OF LABELING IN BULGARIA 148
- 12 AN AFRICAN BACKGROUND TO THE CONCEPT OF OPEN SOCIETY: IKENGA AND OFO CULTIC FIGURES AS STRUCTURAL REPRESENTATIONS OF THE ENTERPRISING SPIRIT OF THE IGBO OF NIGERIA 162
- 13 IMAGINING THE FUTURE OF INTELLIGENCE IN OPEN SOCIETIES: VENTURING BEYOND SECRECY AND SCIENTIFIC PROPHECY AS TOTALITARIAN MODES OF MODERNITY 174
- 14 OPEN SOCIETY IN CRISIS: MAKING SENSE OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND EXPERT ADVICE DURING COVID-19 190
- List of Contributors 207
- Index 211
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction: Open Society Unresolved: Charting the Contested Terrain 1
-
PART I. Philosophical and Theoretical Perspectives on Open Society
- 1 HUMAN NATURE AND THE OPEN SOCIETY 23
- 2 IN PRAISE OF COLDNESS: THE OPEN NEIGHBORHOOD AND ITS ENEMIES 38
- 3 AGAINST IDENTITY: INDIVIDUALITY AS THE FOUNDATION OF OPEN SOCIETY 48
- 4 EMPIRICAL EMBODIMENT OF CRITICAL RATIONALISM: DELIBERATIVE THEORY AND OPEN SOCIETY 59
- 5 OPEN SOCIETY AS AN ACHIEVEMENT: POPPER, GAUS, AND THE LIBERAL TRADITION 72
- 6 NOZICK’S META-UTOPIA AS AN OPEN SOCIETY 83
- 7 HANNAH ARENDT AND LITERARY PEDAGOGY 94
- 8 CAN BERGSON’S DEFINITION OF OPEN SOCIETY BE USEFUL TODAY? 105
-
PART II National and Regional Perspectives on Open Society
- 9 THE GENDER OF ILLIBERALISM: NEW TRANSNATIONAL ALLIANCES AGAINST OPEN SOCIETIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE 117
- 10 OPEN SOCIETY CONTESTED: LIBERAL UNIVERSALISM VERSUS AUTOCRATIC FUNCTIONALISM IN HONG KONG 132
- 11 “SOROSOIDS”: USES OF LABELING IN BULGARIA 148
- 12 AN AFRICAN BACKGROUND TO THE CONCEPT OF OPEN SOCIETY: IKENGA AND OFO CULTIC FIGURES AS STRUCTURAL REPRESENTATIONS OF THE ENTERPRISING SPIRIT OF THE IGBO OF NIGERIA 162
- 13 IMAGINING THE FUTURE OF INTELLIGENCE IN OPEN SOCIETIES: VENTURING BEYOND SECRECY AND SCIENTIFIC PROPHECY AS TOTALITARIAN MODES OF MODERNITY 174
- 14 OPEN SOCIETY IN CRISIS: MAKING SENSE OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND EXPERT ADVICE DURING COVID-19 190
- List of Contributors 207
- Index 211