05528oam 2200445 450 991061926950332120240117211516.09783031122286(electronic bk.)3031122283(electronic bk.)97830311222793031122275(MiAaPQ)EBC7119896(Au-PeEL)EBL7119896(CKB)25179632800041(EXLCZ)992517963280004120230305d2022 uy 0engurcz#---auuuutxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierPolitics after morality toward a Nietzschean left /Donovan MiyasakiCham, Switzerland :Springer,[2022]©20221 online resource (334 pages)Print version: Miyasaki, Donovan Politics after Morality Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2022 9783031122279 Includes bibliographical references (pages 307-320) and index.Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Abbreviations of Nietzsche's Works -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1 Overview of the Project and Summary of the Previous Volume -- 2 Introduction to the Second and Final Volume of the Project -- References -- Part I: Nietzsche Contra Nietzsche: Against Aristocracy -- Chapter 2: Nietzsche's Immoralist Theory of State Legitimacy -- 1 The New Problem of Normative Authority: Legitimacy Without Persuasion -- 2 Nietzsche's Solution to the Authority Problem: Amor Fati as a Posteriori Legitimacy -- References -- Chapter 3: Nietzsche's All Too Moralist Politics of Aristocratic Radicalism -- 1 The Law of Manu: The Foundations of Political Philosophy in Holy Lies -- 2 Meaningful Suffering: Nietzsche's Failed Solution to the Legitimacy Problem -- 3 Aristocratic Radicalism as Nihilistic Idealism: Meaning without Material Foundation -- References -- Part II: Justice Beyond Exchange -- Chapter 4: Nietzsche's Failed Theory of Aristocratic Justice -- 1 Criteria for Reconstructing Nietzsche's Incompatibilist, Immoralist Politics -- 2 Nietzsche's Early Contractarian Theory of Justice: Self-Interested Exchange -- 3 Nietzsche's Late Theory of Justice: Symbolic Exchange Between Classes -- References -- Chapter 5: An Immoralist Theory of Right: Doing Justice to the Drives -- 1 Types, Not Classes, as the Aim of Justice -- 2 Breeding, Not Improvement, as Means to Justice: How to Make Unequals Equal -- 3 Drives, Not Individuals, as the Object of Justice: Difference to the Different -- 4 Non-liberal Rights: Never Make the Different the Same -- References -- Part III: Democracy After Liberty -- Chapter 6: An Immoralist Theory of Peoples: Nobility as Collective Agency -- 1 A Herd Animal Without Instincts: Nietzsche's Misleading Animal Rhetoric -- 2 Herds Versus Peoples: The Possibility of Noble Collective Agency and Self-Rule.3 Peoples and Institutions: The Place of Strong, Manifold Souls in the Social Order -- References -- Chapter 7: An Immoralist Theory of Democracy as the Production of a People -- 1 Pluralism Versus Democracy: Why Popular Power Harms Individual Feelings of Freedom -- 2 The Aristocratism of Procedural Democracy: Majoritarianism, Elitism, and Ideology -- 3 Principles of Immoralist Democracy: A Non-liberalism of Consequences -- 4 The Danger of Non-liberalism: The Gay Science as Experimental, Democratic Verification -- References -- Part IV: Egalitarianism After Morality -- Chapter 8: An Immoralist Theory of Egalitarianism: Toward a Nietzschean Theory of Socialism -- 1 The Breeding Conditions of Higher Types: Nietzsche's Hothouse Politics -- 2 Nietzsche's Failed Case Against Equality: Pathos from Distance Versus Pathos for Difference -- Against Qualitative Equality: Ähnlichkeit or Vielheit, Similarity or Multiplicity? -- Against Quantitative Equality: Pathos of Distance as Superiority or Difference? -- 3 Objections and Replies to Noble Egalitarianism: Why Equality Is Enhancement -- Against Liberal Egalitarianism: Aristocracy as Qualitative or Quantitative Power? -- Against Equality as Complacency: Will to Domination or Will to Resistance? -- Against Equality as Inefficient Enhancement: The Critic's Distribution Argument -- For Equality in Moderation: The Critic's Argument for Progressive Elitism -- The Case for Efficient Egalitarian Enhancement -- References -- Chapter 9: Conclusion: Toward a Nietzschean Socialist Politics -- 1 Why Should a Nietzschean Egalitarianism Be Socialist? -- 2 How Would Nietzschean Socialism Be Different from Agonism, Marxism, or Anarchism? -- 3 How Would Nietzschean Political Practice Be Different from the Contemporary Left's? -- Nietzschean Socialism as a Tragic Realist Politics.Nietzschean Socialism as an Immoralist Politics -- Nietzschean Socialism as an Anti-utopian Politics -- 4 Anti-utopian Socialism: A Populist Coalition of the Non-identical and Faithless -- Anti-utopian Socialism as a Class-Expansionist Politics of Non-identity -- Anti-utopian Socialism as a Socialism for the Faithless -- References -- References -- Index.Political ethicsPolitical ethics.193Miyasaki Donovan1262592MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910619269503321Politics after Morality2952243UNINA