Orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development

The need for orientation is shared by human beings everywhere. People need to learn about their conditions of existence in order to exercise some degree of control over them as a fundamental requirement for their survival both as individuals and as societies. This thesis is about the challenges that...

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Main Author: Saramago, Andre
Other Authors: Linklater, Andrew ; Stullerova, Kamila
Published: Aberystwyth University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.693295
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6932952019-03-14T03:19:32ZOrientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human developmentSaramago, AndreLinklater, Andrew ; Stullerova, Kamila2015The need for orientation is shared by human beings everywhere. People need to learn about their conditions of existence in order to exercise some degree of control over them as a fundamental requirement for their survival both as individuals and as societies. This thesis is about the challenges that human global interdependence raises to the fulfilment of this task. It argues that the globe-spanning webs of interdependent humankind produce a collective problem of orientation characterised by the requirement for a more cosmopolitan perspective on the human condition while recognising the difficulty in achieving just that, given how all theorising is necessarily embedded in particular social, cultural and historical contexts. Through a reinterpretation of the works of Immanuel Kant, Karl Marx, Jürgen Habermas and Norbert Elias the thesis asks how critical international theory might provide a more adequate answer to the problem of orientation. Its main argument is that this answer implies a recovery of grand narratives on the long-term process of human development which avoid a reproduction of the shortcomings with which they have been historically associated; namely, serving as a channel for the projection of parochial and ethnocentric points of view which, under the cover of cosmopolitanism, legitimize practices of exclusion and domination. The conclusion to this thesis is that a synthesis between critical theory and process sociology would enable the production of grand narratives that promote a more cosmopolitan perspective on the conditions of existence of globalised humanity while recognising and protecting the plurality of forms of human self-expression. In this manner, the thesis opens the way towards the development of more adequate means of orientation on the basis of which people might better find their bearings in the world and understand how they might come to make more of their history under conditions of their own choosing.327.1Aberystwyth Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.693295http://hdl.handle.net/2160/f9a261e1-a188-4bc9-b4ae-9fe3387fe6f1Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 327.1
spellingShingle 327.1
Saramago, Andre
Orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development
description The need for orientation is shared by human beings everywhere. People need to learn about their conditions of existence in order to exercise some degree of control over them as a fundamental requirement for their survival both as individuals and as societies. This thesis is about the challenges that human global interdependence raises to the fulfilment of this task. It argues that the globe-spanning webs of interdependent humankind produce a collective problem of orientation characterised by the requirement for a more cosmopolitan perspective on the human condition while recognising the difficulty in achieving just that, given how all theorising is necessarily embedded in particular social, cultural and historical contexts. Through a reinterpretation of the works of Immanuel Kant, Karl Marx, Jürgen Habermas and Norbert Elias the thesis asks how critical international theory might provide a more adequate answer to the problem of orientation. Its main argument is that this answer implies a recovery of grand narratives on the long-term process of human development which avoid a reproduction of the shortcomings with which they have been historically associated; namely, serving as a channel for the projection of parochial and ethnocentric points of view which, under the cover of cosmopolitanism, legitimize practices of exclusion and domination. The conclusion to this thesis is that a synthesis between critical theory and process sociology would enable the production of grand narratives that promote a more cosmopolitan perspective on the conditions of existence of globalised humanity while recognising and protecting the plurality of forms of human self-expression. In this manner, the thesis opens the way towards the development of more adequate means of orientation on the basis of which people might better find their bearings in the world and understand how they might come to make more of their history under conditions of their own choosing.
author2 Linklater, Andrew ; Stullerova, Kamila
author_facet Linklater, Andrew ; Stullerova, Kamila
Saramago, Andre
author Saramago, Andre
author_sort Saramago, Andre
title Orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development
title_short Orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development
title_full Orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development
title_fullStr Orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development
title_full_unstemmed Orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development
title_sort orientation in world politics : critical theory and long-term perspectives on human development
publisher Aberystwyth University
publishDate 2015
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.693295
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