Synopses & Reviews
The first edition of The Common Sense of Politics described itself as a just in time tonic for those of us who have given up on common sense as well as on politics and can no longer see the connection between the two.One has only to scan the pages of this 1996 edition to recognize that this book is just as appropriate and important, if not more. With the development of a European Community, the upcoming American presidential election, and in light of the recent celebration of the U.N.'s 50th anniversary, it is crucial that we, as citizens of the world, approach politics with common sense and a universal desire to improve our institutions toward managing and administering to a greater mankind. This book, built upon universal principles of a politics of common sense and for the purpose of restoring faith in the reform and improvement of our institutions, is the way toward perfect society and toward the bettering of the condition of man on earth.
Review
"...Dr. Adler celebrates reason in his latest work ... relates the teachings of history to the present is a bonus."
Synopsis
The Common Sense of Politics is dedicated to the proposition that politics regarded as a part of moral philosophy has, in fact, its basis in 'common sense, ' and that such is the kind of sense we need to decide questions of 'what is good and bad, right and wrong' in the aims and institutions of society.
About the Author
Mortimer J. Adler was the director of the Institute for Philosophical Research in Chicago and a member of the board of editors of the Encyclopedia Brittanica.