Considers how non-linear notions of causality and time--where multiple, interacting, and partially open systems coexist--could transform the way we imagine political action.
Considers how non-linear notions of causality and time--where multiple, interacting, and partially open systems coexist--could transform the way we imagine political action.
William E. Connolly is Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Political Science at Johns Hopkins University. His most recent books include Capitalism and Christianity, American Style and Pluralism, both also published by Duke University Press. His classic study The Terms of Political Discourse won the Benjamin Lippincott Award in 1999. Connolly is an advisory editor of the journal Theory & Event, a co-editor of the blog The Contemporary Condition, and a former editor (1980–86) of the journal Political Theory.
Inhaltsangabe
Prelude 1 1. Complexity, Agency, and Time 17 2. The Vicissitudes of Experience 43 3. Belief, Spirituality, and Time 68 Interlude 93 4. The Human Predicament 97 5. Capital Flows, Sovereign Decisions, and World Resonance Machines 124 6. The Theorist and the Seer 148 Postlude 176 Acknowledgments 178 Notes 181 Bibliography 199 Index 205
Prelude 1 1. Complexity, Agency, and Time 17 2. The Vicissitudes of Experience 43 3. Belief, Spirituality, and Time 68 Interlude 93 4. The Human Predicament 97 5. Capital Flows, Sovereign Decisions, and World Resonance Machines 124 6. The Theorist and the Seer 148 Postlude 176 Acknowledgments 178 Notes 181 Bibliography 199 Index 205
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