19. The Burkean Outlook
Moral Foundations of Politics (PLSC 118)
Edmund Burke was an English politician who wrote his Reflections on the Revolution in France to express his disdain for the destructive havoc wrought by the French Revolution. As a traditionalist-conservative, he thinks about social change in a cautious and incremental way and characterizes the social contract as binding on those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are yet to be born. Studying the anti-Enlightenment differs from the study of the Enlightenment because traditional conservatives of the Burkean school reject the idea of formulating a theory upon which to base society. Their views can be more accurately characterized as attitudes or dispositions. Social change is possible, but it must reflect the thinking of "the man on the Clapham omnibus." Thinkers like Burke and Devlin place individuals as subordinate to society and its traditions. Therefore, the anti-Enlightenment is a rejection of both of the central tenets of the Enlightenment that have been covered in the course until now--the commitment to individual rights, and to science and reason.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The Anti-enlightenment: Edmund Burke (1729 -- 97)
07:27 - Chapter 2. The Human Condition: Fumbling in the Dark
09:07 - Chapter 3. The Value of Caution
14:48 - Chapter 4. Rights: Limited, Inherited, Not Reasoned
24:10 - Chapter 5. An Indissoluble Social Contract
35:36 - Chapter 6. Lord Devlin and The Wolfenden Report
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Spring 2010.
Видео 19. The Burkean Outlook канала YaleCourses
Edmund Burke was an English politician who wrote his Reflections on the Revolution in France to express his disdain for the destructive havoc wrought by the French Revolution. As a traditionalist-conservative, he thinks about social change in a cautious and incremental way and characterizes the social contract as binding on those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are yet to be born. Studying the anti-Enlightenment differs from the study of the Enlightenment because traditional conservatives of the Burkean school reject the idea of formulating a theory upon which to base society. Their views can be more accurately characterized as attitudes or dispositions. Social change is possible, but it must reflect the thinking of "the man on the Clapham omnibus." Thinkers like Burke and Devlin place individuals as subordinate to society and its traditions. Therefore, the anti-Enlightenment is a rejection of both of the central tenets of the Enlightenment that have been covered in the course until now--the commitment to individual rights, and to science and reason.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The Anti-enlightenment: Edmund Burke (1729 -- 97)
07:27 - Chapter 2. The Human Condition: Fumbling in the Dark
09:07 - Chapter 3. The Value of Caution
14:48 - Chapter 4. Rights: Limited, Inherited, Not Reasoned
24:10 - Chapter 5. An Indissoluble Social Contract
35:36 - Chapter 6. Lord Devlin and The Wolfenden Report
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Spring 2010.
Видео 19. The Burkean Outlook канала YaleCourses
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