The term 'conservative' - denoting groups as diverse
and incompatible as the religious right, libertarian
free-marketeers and free-spending neocons - has been
lost to politics. Yet the original conservative
ideology, first developed in the eighteenth century by
Edmund Burke, was concerned with managing change.
Genuine conservatism has its own relevance in a complex
and dynamic world where change is rapid, pervasive and
dislocating. Conservatism transcends traditional
politics, and has surprising applications - not least as
the most appropriate and practical response to climate
change. Conservatism by Kieron O'Hara is a revision of
the traditional conservative philosophy for the modern
age. It shows what a properly conservative ideology
looks like today, and demonstrates that self-styled
'conservatives' actually promote damaging change in
their own and other societies.Drawing on such great
conservative thinkers as Burke and Adam Smith,
philosophers ancient and modern from Plato to
Wittgenstein, and today's social commentators such as
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Ulrich Beck and Jared Diamond,
this outline of conservative philosophy lays bare our
lack of understanding of our own societies, showing how
risk pervades society and how it should be managed. It
also proves that conservatism is distinct from
neo-liberalism, neo-conservatism and the extreme
positions of today's 'culture warriors'. O'Hara has
written a complete and consistent description of a
philosophy of change and innovation. His book shows how
conservatism is an ideology sensitive to cultural
differences between the US, Europe, the Middle East,
East Asia and elsewhere, while highlighting the issues
of technology, trust and privacy. This book will appeal
to anyone interested in the history, and future, of
political philosophy and social thought. |
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