A Preface to American Political Theory
Donald S. Lutz
200 pages, 6 x 9
American Political Thought
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0545-3, $27.50
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0546-0, $14.95
Donald Lutz begins A Preface
to American Political Theory by explaining what the book
doesn't do.
It doesn't begin with a panegyric to the American founding.
It doesn't answer the following questions: "What are the
basic principles in the U.S. Constitution? What were the intentions
of the founders with respect to (fill in your own topic)? What
is the meaning of pluralism, or separation of powers, or democracy,
or (fill in your own concept)?" In short, it doesn't provide
an overview of the content, development, or major conclusions
of American political theory.
What it does do is provide "a pre-theoretical
analysis of how to go about studying questions like the ones
above--how to conceptualize the project, how to proceed in looking
for answers, how to avoid the logical traps peculiar to the study
of American political theory."
Lutz sets out to emancipate American political theorists from
empiricism and inappropriate European theories and methadologies.
The end result is to establish the foundation for the systematic
study of American behavior, institutions, and ideas; to provide
a general introduction to the study of American political theory;
and to illustrate how textual analysis, history, empirical research,
and analytic philosophy are all part of the enterprise.
Designed for students and scholars in all disciplines, including
political science, history, and legal studies, A Preface to
American Political Theory doesn't provide answers to central
continuing issues in American political theory. Rather, it provides
an effective, sophisticated entree into the study of American
political theory. Readers will be armed with the intellectual
tools to engage in systematic study and makes them aware of the
pitfalls they will inevitably encounter.
"Lutz isolates core rules for analyzing important questions
of self-government. He articulates well the complexity of assessing
American political theorizing about real political problems.
He draws our attention especially to significant textual and
theoretical works that outline the richness of the American traditions."--George
J. Graham, Jr., Professor of Political Science, Vanderbilt
University
"This book is not only a grand argument in favor of giving
American political thought its due, but it is a tour de force
of reasoned argument and analysis that blends history, law, political
science, and philosophy. Lutz concentrates on the founding era
and rescues the study of early American constitutionalism from
the intellectual morass into which advocates of original intent,
on the one hand, and proponents of constitutional interpretation
as judicial fiat, on the other, have placed it. He does so by
liberating the study of American political theory from narrow
empiricism while showing that systematic empirical analysis is
an essential part of that theory. The result is a powerful, persuasive,
and long needed book that elevates the thought and action of
the founding generation of this nation into a preface for understanding
the evolution of American political theory generally."--Kermit
L. Hall, Dean, Henry Kendall College of Arts and Sciences,
University of Tulsa, and author of The Magic Mirror: Law in
American History
"A masterful introduction to the study of American constitutional
documents from a philosophic perspective. It will be used with
great profit for many years by students of the subject."--Daniel
J. Elazar, author of The American Constitutional Tradition
DONALD S. LUTZ, professor of political science at the
University of Houston, is author of The Origins of American
Constitutionalism.
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