Author Meets Critics: The Future of Liberalism
Alan Wolfe, Boston College
Mary Sarah Bilder, Boston College
Daniel J. Mahoney,Ìý´¡²õ²õ³Ü³¾±è³Ù¾±´Ç²ÔÌý°ä´Ç±ô±ô±ð²µ±ð
Date:ÌýApril 29, 2009
Abstract
A compelling and deeply felt exploration and defense of liberalism: what it actually is, why it is relevant today, and how it can help our society chart a forward course.ÌýThe Future of LiberalismÌýrepresents the culmination of four decades of thinking and writing about contemporary politics by Alan Wolfe.
But Wolfe also makes it clear that before liberalism can be successfully applied to today’s problems, it needs to be recovered, understood, and embraced—not just by Americans but by all modern people—as the most beneficial way to live in our complex modern world.ÌýThe Future of LiberalismÌýis a crucial, enlightening and immensely rewarding step in that direction.
Speaker Bio
Alan WolfeÌýis the founding director of the Boisi Center and Professor of Political Science at Boston College. He received his doctorate in political science from the University of Pennsylvania in 1967. He has honorary degrees from Loyola College in Maryland and St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia. Wolfe is author of more than a dozen books, includingÌýThe Future of LiberalismÌý(Knopf, 2009),ÌýÌý(Yale, 2006),ÌýÌý(Penguin, 1999) ²¹²Ô»åÌýÌý(Free Press, 2003). Widely considered one of the nation's most prominent public intellectuals, he is an editor atÌýThe New Republic, aÌýfrequentÌýcontributor toÌýThe NewÌýYork Times,Ìý³Ù³ó±ðÌýAtlantic MonthlyÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýWashington Post, and has delivered lectures across the United States, Europe and Middle East. (More info on Alan Wolfe...)
Mary Sarah BilderÌýis a Professor ofÌýLaw teaching in the areas of property and American legal and constitutional history at Boston College Law School. She also is the MichaelÌýand Helen Lee Distinguished Scholar.ÌýShe received her J.D.Ìýfrom Harvard Law School and her Ph.D. from Harvard University in the History of American Civilization. She writes primarily in the area of constitutionalism and colonial American legal culture. She is the author ofÌýThe Transatlantic Constitution: Colonial Legal Culture and the EmpireÌý(Harvard University Press, 2004), awarded the Littleton-Griswold Award from the American Historical Association. Her articles appear in ³Ù³ó±ðÌýMany Legalities of Early America,Ìý³Ù³ó±ðÌýCambridge History of Law in America, and law reviews, including the Yale Law Journal, the Stanford Law Review, the Yale Journal of Law and the HumanitiesÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýthe Hastings Law Journal. She currently serves on the Editorial Board of Law and History Review, the Council of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, the Board of Overseers of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Historical Society, and is a member of the American Law Institute.
Daniel J. MahoneyÌýis Professor of Political Science at Assumption College in Worcester, MA. He is the author and editor ofÌýeleven books, including most recentlyÌýThe Solzhenitsyn Reader: New and Essential Writings, 1947-2005,Ìýwhich was released in a paperback edition in January of 2009. His essays and reviews on a wide variety of topics have appeared inÌýThe National Interest, The Public Interest, First Things, The New Criterion, The Wall Street Journal, The European Journal of Political TheoryÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýPerspectives on Political Science, among other places. He is book review editor ofÌý³§´Ç³¦¾±±ð³Ù²âÌýand associate editor ofÌýPerspectives on Political Science. In 1999 he was the recipient of the Prix Raymond Aron. He is presently completing a book entitledÌýDefending Truth and Liberty: The Conservative Foundations of the Liberal Order.
Event Photos
Event Recap
The Boisi Center’s final event of the year focused on Alan Wolfe’s newest book,ÌýThe Future of LiberalismÌý(Knopf, 2009). Wolfe was joined by friendly critics Mary Sarah Bilder, Professor of Law, a legal historian at Boston College School of Law, and Daniel Mahoney, Professor of Political Science, a political philosopher at Assumption College. Liberalism, argued Wolfe in his opening remarks, is grounded in the principle that as many people as possible should have as much control over their lives as possible. Liberty and equality, he said, are mutually reinforcing, not contradictory, as some theorists would have it; a person cannot lead a life of dignity and self-respect if those around her are not able to do the same.
Bilder praised Wolfe’s historical method and sensibility but argued that his account of John Locke required more nuance. Locke, she argued, was at once both deeply conservative (in his views on property ownership and race) and unusually liberal (in his promotion of religious tolerance). Mahoney welcomed Wolfe’s call for a liberalism that is both self-critical and friendly to religion, but critiqued what he saw as liberalism’s reliance on the state for promulgation of its ends. The ensuing Q&A session brought spirited discussion of liberal means and ends in the Obama era.
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Further Reading
- E.J. Dionne, Jr.Ìý.Ìý(Princeton, 2008).
- Paul Star.Ìý. (Basic Books, 2007).
- Andrew Sullivan,Ìý.Ìý(Harper Perennial, 2007).
Alan Wolfe on Liberalism:
April 16 -- Moderated by William Galston; with E.J. Dionne, Jr. and Ross Douthat