Abating contingency

Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (3):267-288 (2016)
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Abstract

This article investigates the liberal political implications of Michael Oakeshott’s political theory of civility and civil association by focusing on his judicious attempts to abate contingency. It argues that Oakeshott’s political theory can be best understood as ‘political pluralism’, aimed at the maximalist accommodation of abundant and fluctuating human pluralities, individual and associational. By reinterpreting Oakeshott as a defender of civil society, composed of numerous purposive associations, against state-imposed monism, it argues that in Oakeshott’s theory civil association is devised to protect associational freedom, thereby keeping civil society as free as possible. It then discusses the distinctiveness of Oakeshott’s characteristically ‘liberal’ political theory by critically engaging it with two dominant strands of liberalism, namely, liberal pluralism and political liberalism.

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original Kim, Sungmoon (2016) "Abating contingency: Michael Oakeshott’s political pluralism". Philosophy and Social Criticism 42(3):267-288

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Sungmoon Kim
City University of Hong Kong

Citations of this work

Public goods in Michael Oakeshott’s ‘world of pragmata’.Maurits de Jongh - 2022 - European Journal of Political Theory 21 (3):561-584.
Public goods in Michael Oakeshott’s ‘world of pragmata’.Maurits de Jongh - 2022 - European Journal of Political Theory 21 (3):561-584.

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