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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Niko KolodnyPublisher: Harvard University Press Imprint: Harvard University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.40cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.839kg ISBN: 9780674248151ISBN 10: 0674248155 Pages: 496 Publication Date: 21 February 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book is smart, provocative, timely, and deeply informed. It engages and carries to a new level of clarity and sophistication a set of themes associated with social egalitarianism. It also offers as comprehensive a critical view of central themes in recent democratic theory as I can imagine. Reading The Pecking Order is a rare and bracing experience. -- Charles R. Beitz, author of <i>The Idea of Human Rights</i> The Pecking Order provides a powerful articulation and defense of its master idea of noninferiority. That idea is already percolating through political philosophy, but nobody has done anything like the systematic development of it that Kolodny achieves. This book stands out for its ability to animate so many different debates in political philosophy through a single idea, deploying it to address a wider range and variety of moral and political phenomena. Carefully argued, clearly written, and remarkable both for the depth of its analysis and the scope of its engagement, Kolodny's book is one that everyone working in political philosophy and many in democratic theory will want to read. -- Arthur Ripstein, author of <i>Force and Freedom</i> The Pecking Order provides a powerful articulation and defense of its master idea of noninferiority. That idea is already percolating through political philosophy, but nobody has done anything like the systematic development of it that Kolodny achieves. This book stands out for its ability to animate so many different debates in political philosophy through a single idea, deploying it to address a wider range and variety of moral and political phenomena. Carefully argued, clearly written, and remarkable for both the depth of its analysis and the scope of its engagement, Kolodny's book is one that everyone working in political philosophy and many in democratic theory will want to read. -- Arthur Ripstein, author of <i>Force and Freedom</i> In this far-reaching study, Niko Kolodny illuminates everyone's fundamental interest in being an equal. The claim against hierarchy-against being socially subordinate to others-is offered as a key to more stuck doors in political philosophy than other time-honored projects around freedom and equality, liberalism, and democracy. Relentless in method and vivid in style, the book will be widely studied, and rightly so. -- David Estlund, author of <i>Utopophobia</i> This book is smart, provocative, timely, and deeply informed. It engages and carries to a new level of clarity and sophistication a set of themes associated with social egalitarianism. It also offers as comprehensive a critical view of central themes in recent democratic theory as I can imagine. Reading The Pecking Order is a rare and bracing experience. -- Charles R. Beitz, author of <i>The Idea of Human Rights</i> Author InformationNiko Kolodny is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |