Review:
With an unmatched magisterial command, Alan Ryan powerfully reminds and teaches us how the leading thinkers since classic times can and must inform our debates over how to envision the better world we must build.--Anthony W. Marx, President, New York Public Library
Alan Ryan has created a vision of the entire surge of Western political thought which is equal to the heroic venture of George Sabine, which I studied in my youth. Ryan demonstrates throughout vivacity, and a tenacious grasp of the human meaning of everything that has transpired in political speculation from the ancients on through the threshhold of our own dark age. I commend particularly his terse eloquence, his capacious erudition, and the verve and judicious intensity with which he somehow allows his whole being to inform his vast scope and deep concern of our human limitations.--Harold Bloom
In a work of astonishing scope and ambition, Alan Ryan, surveying the whole vast field, concisely charts the welter of conflicting positions and tracks the sometimes thrilling, sometimes catastrophic consequences of political thought.--Stephen Greenblatt, author of The Swerve: How the World Became Modern
Alan Ryan has taken a vast range of challenging material written over twenty five centuries in the West and engaged with it in prose of stunning clarity. He displays the intrinsic interest of reflection on writers from Herodotus to yesterday, while showing how it can be a powerful resource for dealing with politics today. It is an amazing achievement to combine so much learning with such lucidity.--Anthony Appiah, author of Cosmopolitanism
In lucid, precise and accessible prose, Alan Ryan has written an unparalleled guide for our times to the Western tradition of political thought. From Herodotus through the Christian world and the rise of modernity to our own time, readers will be stimulated to reflect on historical, contemporary and perennial questions.--Steven Lukes, author of Power: A Radical View
If you want to understand why we think as we do, go back to the ancient Greeks. Alan Ryan brilliantly explains why that is true--and why it matters.--Mary Beard, author of The Roman Triumph
In an age of specialization, we have lost much of the sense of the sweep of the story of Western thinking about politics. In his new book, Alan Ryan has recovered the greatness and deficiencies of that experience. ...Written with an exceptional clarity and presence of voice, Ryan's book is the best comprehensive statement of the achievements and failures of the Western liberal tradition.--Tracy B. Strong, UCSD Distinguished Professor, Political Science Department, University of California, San Diego
Alan Ryan's marvelous survey brings the major thinkers to the table, orchestrating a provocative and enlightening conversation across the centuries that offers fresh and illuminating perspectives on perennial political problems. Scholars and engaged citizens will delight in partaking of Ryan's intellectual feast.--Peter Onuf, author of Jefferson's Empire
Monumental... At the heart of the project is a belief that this stuff matters, that the thinkers it revolves around--Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Thomas Hobbes, Karl Marx--remain relevant and fresh... The book is a distillation of [Alan Ryan's] thinking, both intellectual and practical, and although it can be daunting, the triumph is how, as Ryan takes us through the material, he makes it so much more.--David Ulin
About the Author:
Alan Ryan was warden of New College, Oxford University, where he was a professor of political theory. He is the author of John Dewey and the High Tide of American Liberalism, Bertrand Russell: A Political Life, and On Politics: A History of Political Thought from Herodotus to the Present.
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