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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
May 2025
Print publication year:
2025
Online ISBN:
9781009395274
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Book description

We are all parties to a social contract and obligated under it. Or is this mere fiction? How is such an agreement possible in a society riven by deep moral disagreement? William Edmundson explains the social-contract tradition from its beginnings in the English Revolution, through Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau to its culmination in the work of John Rawls. The idea that legitimate government rests on the consent of free equals took shape in the seventeenth century and was developed in the eighteenth but fell into disuse in the nineteenth century even as democracy, toleration, and limited government gained ground. Edmundson shows how Rawls revived the idea of a social contract in the mid-twentieth century to secure these gains, as the then-dominant moral theories, such as utilitarianism, could not. The book also defends Rawls's conviction that political equality is integral to the idea of reciprocity at the heart of the tradition.

Reviews

‘This book sheds new light on a powerful and inspiring idea that has shaped modern political philosophy: the idea of a social contract. Carefully argued and engagingly written, it takes a fresh look at the works of the giants of the social contract tradition – Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and Rawls – and presents them as part of a conversation that starts with the Putney Debates.' ,

Fabian Wendt - Virginia Tech

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