Can realism move beyond a Methodenstreit? [Review of: M. Freeden (2013) The political theory of political thinking: the anatomy of a practice; M. Sleat (2013) Liberal realism: a realist theory of liberal politics]
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| Publication date | 2016 |
| Journal | Political Theory |
| Volume | Issue number | 44 | 3 |
| Pages (from-to) | 410-420 |
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| Abstract |
Is there more to the recent surge in political realism than just a debate on how best to continue doing what political theorists are already doing? I use two recent books, by Michael Freeden and Matt Sleat, as a testing ground for realism’s claims about its import on the discipline. I argue that both book take realism beyond the Methodenstreit, though each in a different direction: Freeden’s takes us in the realm of meta-metatheory, Sleat’s is a genuine exercise in grounding liberal normative theory in a non-moralistic way. I conclude with wider methodological observations. I argue that unlike communitarianism (the previous contender for the discipline’s renewal), realism has the potential to open new vistas, though their novelty is to a large extent relative to the last forty years or so: realism is best thought of as a return to a more traditional way of doing political philosophy.
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| Document type | Book/Film/Article/Exhibition review |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1177/0090591715621507 |
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