Visions of Politics
The first of three volumes of essays by Quentin Skinner, one of the world's leading intellectual historians. This collection includes some of his most important philosophical and methodological statements written over the past four decades, each carefully revised for publication in this form. In a series of seminal essays Professor Skinner sets forth the intellectual principles that inform his work. Writing as a practising historian, he considers the theoretical difficulties inherent in the pursuit of knowledge and interpretation, and elucidates the methodology which finds its expression in his two successive volumes. All of Professor Skinner's work is characterised by philosophical power, limpid clarity, and elegance of exposition; these essays, many of which are now recognised classics, provide a fascinating and convenient digest of the development of his thought.
Professor Skinner has been awarded the Balzan Prize Life Time Achievement Award for Political Thought, History and Theory. Full details of this award can be found at http://www.balzan.it/News_eng.aspx?ID=2474
- The major methodological statements of one of the world's leading intellectual historians
- Each essay revised and reset, with apparatus presented in consistent form
- Numerous classic pieces, collected together for the first time
Awards
Winner of the 2007 David Easton Award - Foundation of Political Theory Section of the American Political Science Association
Reviews & endorsements
"Quentin Skinner, Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge since 1997, ranks among the most original, prolific, and widely admired contemporary historians of early modern political thought...[His] methodological and substantive essays are essential reading for historians of political thought..." Renaissance Quarterly
Product details
September 2002Paperback
9780521589260
225 pages
228 × 151 × 17 mm
0.377kg
Available
Table of Contents
- General preface
- Full contents: volumes 1–3
- Acknowledgements
- Conventions
- Volume 1: Regarding Method:
- 1. Introduction: seeing things their way
- 2. The practice of history and the cult of the fact
- 3. Interpretation, rationality and truth
- 4. Meaning and understanding in the history of ideas
- 5. Motives, intentions and interpretation
- 6. Interpretation and the understanding of speech acts
- 7. 'Social meaning' and the explanation of social action
- 8. Moral principles and social change
- 9. The idea of a cultural lexicon
- 10. Retrospect: studying rhetoric and conceptual change
- Bibliography
- Index.