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This book examines the idea of the public intellectual, and considers the broader intellectual trends inside and outside the academy that determine the role of intellectuals in the public life. This book is a special issue of the journal
Criticla
From the Back Cover
Ideas can define and transform society, but how healthy is intellectual life today? In a period when Big Brother refers not to George Orwell but to a reality TV show, and when bright young things are developing gameshow formats rather than scribbling essays; when thinkers join thinktanks to design short-term government policy rather than reflecting on and challenging the status quo, and when the ever growing number of graduates seem more interested in job prospects than academic endeavour, is intellectual life in terminal decline?
Whereas it has been contended that the public intellectual is in decline in our dumbed down, anti-political times, others counter that the expansion of higher education and the proliferation of media have simply democratised the world of ideas. This book examines the idea of the public intellectual, and considers the boarder intellectual trends inside and outside the academy that determine the role of intellectuals in public life.
The first section of this book looks at the idea of the public intellectual, considering whether such thinkers are becoming an endangered species. The second looks at the legacy of relativism and ethical doubts about the pursuit of knowledge, and the effect of such developments on intellectual life, and the final section considers the expansion of higher education and the changing role of the academic. Taken together, the essays in this collection form a comprehensive overview of the intellectual climate today, and the possibilities for the future.
This book is a special issue of the journal
Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy.
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