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In our time, the "modern age" (so-called) is slowly coming to an end. This is clearly an ambivalent process. No doubt, some aspects of modernity have been beneficial and progressive. Foremost among these beneficial aspects have been the rise of democracy (as an antidote to autocracy) and the emphasis on personal involvement in all aspects of life, in both thought and action. The downside of these developments has been the erection of rigid boundaries around self and others, evident in the cult of a narrow individualism and a rigid national identity in the state or political community. This…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In our time, the "modern age" (so-called) is slowly coming to an end. This is clearly an ambivalent process. No doubt, some aspects of modernity have been beneficial and progressive. Foremost among these beneficial aspects have been the rise of democracy (as an antidote to autocracy) and the emphasis on personal involvement in all aspects of life, in both thought and action. The downside of these developments has been the erection of rigid boundaries around self and others, evident in the cult of a narrow individualism and a rigid national identity in the state or political community. This cult has not prevented the pursuit of broader cosmopolitan agendas, but the latter were usually tied to the strategies of "great powers" or leading nations. Without being openly admitted, the agendas of great powers have often involved the subjugation of smaller nations or countries or their utilization as proxies in global policies.
Autorenporträt
Fred Dallmayr nasceu a 18 de Outubro de 1928, em Augsburg, Alemanha. Estudou na Universidade de Munique, onde obteve o Doutoramento em Direito e na Duke University nos EUA, onde obteve o Doutoramento. Depois de ter leccionado em várias universidades americanas, ingressou na Universidade de Notre Dame em 1980, como professor titular. Publicou amplamente.