1995
DOI: 10.1080/09546559508427310
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The politics of the millennium

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Knopff is concerned with the way that the rhetoric of rights tempts citizens to succumb to the “theocratic temptation” of “monism” where “rights, in effect, are an expression of the oneness of the people, an agreement by that people as to what is shared by all, and is thus so fundamental as to constitute the horizon, rather than the subject, of politics” (Knopff, 1998: 699). Monism is, in the words of Thomas Flanagan, the “belief in a society without significant conflicts of interests—a society without war (external conflict) or class struggle (internal conflict), without hierarchy and oppression, without poverty and inequality” (1995: 171).…”
Section: Knopff the Straw “Moral Rights Skeptic”mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Knopff is concerned with the way that the rhetoric of rights tempts citizens to succumb to the “theocratic temptation” of “monism” where “rights, in effect, are an expression of the oneness of the people, an agreement by that people as to what is shared by all, and is thus so fundamental as to constitute the horizon, rather than the subject, of politics” (Knopff, 1998: 699). Monism is, in the words of Thomas Flanagan, the “belief in a society without significant conflicts of interests—a society without war (external conflict) or class struggle (internal conflict), without hierarchy and oppression, without poverty and inequality” (1995: 171).…”
Section: Knopff the Straw “Moral Rights Skeptic”mentioning
confidence: 99%