Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2336002895> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 40 of
40
with 100 items per page.
- W2336002895 endingPage "67" @default.
- W2336002895 startingPage "38" @default.
- W2336002895 abstract "Relevant and Irrelevant Criticisms A major legacy of Leo Strauss’s life and scholarship was a distinctive way of reading texts. Despite Strauss’s attempt to assure Hans-Georg Gadamer in 1954 that his “hermeneutic experience is very limited and excludes the possibility of a universal hermeneutic theory,” his assertion is not to be taken uncritically. Strauss pioneered a way of studying political classics that his students took over and disseminated. Once created, this method was carried from Strauss’s redoubt at Chicago into departments of political science and political theory across the United States and Canada. One can identify Strauss’s hermeneutic by how its adherents examine texts and by the political thinkers they interpret. Plato, Averroes, Maimonides, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Spinoza, Locke, Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Tocqueville – and less often Aristotle, Burke, and Hegel – are thinkers whom Strauss and his disciples have considered worthy of scrutiny. By contrast, they care less (except for the Catholic Straussians) about any distinctly Christian political heritage. This disinclination may come from the belief that the best political thinkers are thought to have been religious skeptics. Some Straussians have also claimed to find concealed skepticism about religious or political authority in medieval writers who are conventionally considered orthodox Catholics." @default.
- W2336002895 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2336002895 creator A5050928998 @default.
- W2336002895 date "2011-12-29" @default.
- W2336002895 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2336002895 title "Constructing a Methodology" @default.
- W2336002895 cites W2040069937 @default.
- W2336002895 cites W2129596120 @default.
- W2336002895 cites W2505702366 @default.
- W2336002895 cites W4233048503 @default.
- W2336002895 cites W4246769069 @default.
- W2336002895 cites W626389490 @default.
- W2336002895 doi "https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139083591.003" @default.
- W2336002895 hasPublicationYear "2011" @default.
- W2336002895 type Work @default.
- W2336002895 sameAs 2336002895 @default.
- W2336002895 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2336002895 crossrefType "book-chapter" @default.
- W2336002895 hasAuthorship W2336002895A5050928998 @default.
- W2336002895 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2336002895 hasConceptScore W2336002895C41008148 @default.
- W2336002895 hasLocation W23360028951 @default.
- W2336002895 hasOpenAccess W2336002895 @default.
- W2336002895 hasPrimaryLocation W23360028951 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2049775471 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2093578348 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2350741829 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2358668433 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2376932109 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2382290278 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2390279801 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W2336002895 hasRelatedWork W2530322880 @default.
- W2336002895 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2336002895 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2336002895 magId "2336002895" @default.
- W2336002895 workType "book-chapter" @default.