Originally published in 1963, this classic book is a rethinking of the history of Western political philosophy. Charles N. R. McCoy contrasts classical-medieval principles against the "hypotheses" at the root of modern liberalism and modern conservativism.In Part I, "The Classical Christian Tradition from Plato to Aquinas," the author lays the foundation for a philosophical "structure" capable of producing "constitutional liberty." Part II, "The Modern Theory of Politics from Machiavelli to Marx," attempts to show, beginning with Machiavelli, the reversal and destruction of the pre-modern "structure" postulated in Part I.McCoy stresses the great contributions of Aristotle to political thought found in his more familiar Ethics and Politics, but also includes key insights drawn from Metaphysics and Physics. These contributions are developed and perfected, McCoy argues, by Augustine and Aquinas. Two other important features include McCoy's epistemological insights into Plato's work that will be new to many readers and the author's juxtaposition of traditional natural law with "the modernized theory of natural law." The modern account of autonomous natural law, in McCoy's view, helps explain the totalitarian direction of key aspects of modern political thought. This classic volume on the origins of modern philosophical thought remains a standard in the field.
Introduction to the Transaction EditionThomas M. Neumayr and Richard J. DoughertyPrefaceIntroductionPart One. The Classical-Christian Tradition1 Plato: Logic and Political RealityThe SophistsSocrates and PlatoThe Doctrine that Virtue Is KnowledgeThe State "The Individual Writ Large"Property and the Family2 Aristotle: Political Science and the Real WorldArt and PrudenceEthics Fundamental Principles of Self-governmentThe Political Life and the Contemplative LifeThe Primacy of the Common GoodEconomics and PoliticsPolitical Science: Architectonic and Principal ScienceThe Political Community Forms of GovernmentRule According to Law and the Forms of GovernmentThe Mixed Forms of Government and the Polity3 The Political Philosophy of Later Greece and RomeThe Philosophies of ConductNatural Law, Law of Nations, and Civil Law4 Christianity and Political Philosophy: The Relation of Church and StateGreek Political Philosophy and Christian TheologyThe Theory of Church and StateSt. Augustine: "The City of God"St. Thomas Aquinas: Church and StateEgidius Colonna John of Paris Marsilius of Padua5 Christianity and Political Philosophy: The Theory of Constitutional GovernmentThe Political Community: The Law of the ConstitutionThe Best Form of GovernmentConsent and Possibility: Intrinsic Limits on Positive LawThe Divine Positive Law and Constitutional LibertyPart Two. The Modern Theory of Politics6 Machiavelli and the New Politics: The Primacy of ArtMachiavelli and the RenaissanceArt and the New PhysicsThe Political Thought of MachiavelliThe Protestant Reformation and Political Philosophy7 The Modernized Theory of Natural Law and the EnlightenmentJean Bodin (1530 1596)The Modernized Theory of Natural Law Hugo Grotius (1583 1645)Thomas Hobbes (1588 1679)John Locke (1632 1704)Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712 1778)8 The Outcome of Autonomous Natural Law: Classical Liberalism and ConservatismDavid Hume The Attack on CausalityAdam Smith "The Theory of Moral Sentiments"Jeremy Bentham (1748 1832)John Stuart Mill (1806 1873)Edmund Burke (1729 1797) and Modern ConservatismThe Dilemma of Liberalism9 The Marxist Revolutionary Idea: The Enlightenment in GermanyThe German Philosophical RevolutionLudwig Feuerbach and the Humanist Critique of Philosophy10 The Marxist Revolutionary Idea: Philosophy Passes into PracticeEpilogueIndex
Francis Graham Wilson, USA) Cheek Jr., H. Lee (East Georgia State College, USA) Power, M. Susan (Hamlin University, Kathy B. Cheek, USA) Metallo, Thomas (Liberty University
Francis Graham Wilson, USA) Cheek Jr., H. Lee (East Georgia State College, USA) Power, M. Susan (Hamlin University, Kathy B. Cheek, USA) Metallo, Thomas (Liberty University