Book contents
- WHY NOT MODERATION?
- Why Not Moderation?
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Caveat lector!
- About This Book
- Prologue Why Radical Moderation?
- PART I THE WORLD WE LIVE IN
- PART II WHAT KIND OF VIRTUE IS MODERATION?
- PART III DO MODERATES HAVE A POLITICAL VISION?
- Interlude
- 1 The Limits of Moral Clarity
- 2 Against the Politics of Warfare
- 3 No Manichaeism and No Litmus Tests
- 4 Compromise
- 5 Trimming and Balance
- 6 Centrism
- 7 Eclecticism and Pluralism
- 8 Dialogue
- PART IV THE ETHOS OF MODERATION
- PART V WHO NEEDS MODERATION TODAY?
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
1 - The Limits of Moral Clarity
from PART III - DO MODERATES HAVE A POLITICAL VISION?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2023
- WHY NOT MODERATION?
- Why Not Moderation?
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Caveat lector!
- About This Book
- Prologue Why Radical Moderation?
- PART I THE WORLD WE LIVE IN
- PART II WHAT KIND OF VIRTUE IS MODERATION?
- PART III DO MODERATES HAVE A POLITICAL VISION?
- Interlude
- 1 The Limits of Moral Clarity
- 2 Against the Politics of Warfare
- 3 No Manichaeism and No Litmus Tests
- 4 Compromise
- 5 Trimming and Balance
- 6 Centrism
- 7 Eclecticism and Pluralism
- 8 Dialogue
- PART IV THE ETHOS OF MODERATION
- PART V WHO NEEDS MODERATION TODAY?
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
Summary
This chapter shows the limits and ambiguities of the concept of moral clarity even when it is applied with good intentions. Using concrete examples from contemporary politics, it warns that quite often claims invoking moral clarity are an expression of reductionist thinking and tend to overrreach.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Why Not Moderation?Letters to Young Radicals, pp. 77 - 83Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023