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On Order$24.95
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The Perversion of Autonomy: Coercion and Community in a Liberal Societyby Willard Gaylin
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:Modern psychological and political theory meet head-on in this powerful re-evaluation of America's contradictory and sometimes dangerous addiction to individualism. Best-selling author Gaylin and co-author Jennings investigate the contentious intersections of interdependence and autonomy, rights and public responsibility. They examine the painful abrasion occurring between America's tradition of personal freedom and privacy, as it rubs against the still valuable if almost vanishing ideals of sacrifice and social order. Our Current culture of autonomy--championed by both liberals on the left and libertarians on the right--is based on the idea of rationality as the motivation for human conduct. But, as the authors remind us, people are not simply rational creatures--appeals to emotions are always far more effective than logical argument in changing our behavior. This timely edition includes a new preface; updated examples and illustrations throughout; and new coverage of contemporary social critics and their work since the publication of the first edition. Two essential new chapters, one on the movement to forgo life-sustaining treatment and the other on physician-assisted suicide, particularly clarify the authors' arguments. Drawing on these and numerous other illustrations--with significant emphasis on the state of American health care--Gaylin and Jennings demonstrate that society has not just the right but the duty to occasionally invoke fear, shame, and guilt in order to motivate humane behavior. As cases of AIDS are once again on the upswing as the dangerously mentally ill are allowed to wander free and untreated, as starvation and poverty still hold too many in its grip in therichest nation on the planet, this controversial book, considerably revised and expanded, is needed more than ever. If we are to indeed preserve and nurture a genuinely free--and liberal--society, the authors suggest that these ''coercions'' may be essential for the health and the maturity of a nation where we all too often avert our eyes, not seeing that our neighbor is in pain or trouble and needs our help. Book News Annotation:Gaylin (psychiatry, Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons) and
Jennings (The Hastings Center and Yale U. School of Public Health)
combine psychological and political theory in their argument that the
growth of a libertarian component within liberalism has led to "a
culture of autonomy" that detrimentally elevates values of personal
freedom over notions of interdependence. They call for a critical
response that takes into account aspects of the human condition such
as need, vulnerability, frailty, fallibility, weakness, and mortality
and encourages the coercive controls of the social emotions shame,
guilt, and conscience.
Annotation (c)2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) Synopsis:Modern psychological and political theory meet head-on in this powerful re-evaluation of America's contradictory and sometimes dangerous addiction to individualism. Best-selling author Gaylin and co-author Jennings investigate the contentious intersections of interdependence and autonomy, rights and public responsibility. They examine the painful abrasion occurring between America's tradition of personal freedom and privacy, as it rubs against the still valuable if almost vanishing ideals of sacrifice and social order. Table of ContentsFreedom, coercion, and commonsense morality — A self of one's own : the meaning of autonomy — Land of the free : autonomy in American life today — Seduced by autonomy : heeding the Grand Inquisitor and other critics — It's only human nature — Growing up good — Irrational man — The multiple meanings of coercion — In defense of social control : the ethics of coercion — Autonomy gone bonkers : the mentally impaired — Last rights I : decisions to forgo life-sustaining medical treatment — Last rights II : autonomy, moral trespass, and physician-assisted suicide — Beyond autonomy : toward an ethic of interdependence.
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