Bryan Garsten
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Saving Persuasion: A Defense of Rhetoric and Judgment
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published
2006
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6 editions
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Rousseau, the Age of Enlightenment, and Their Legacies
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published
2012
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8 editions
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Rousseau
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Humanistic Judgment: Ten Experiments in Reading
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
“To allow oneself to be shamed is to admit that you are subject to and ruled by society’s arbiters of what is acceptable. Demagogues, as a rule, insist that they will not be so ruled; that is part of their democratic appeal. Shame is a constraint, and so is an affront to freedom. Shame condemns from a moral high ground, and so is an affront to equality. The demagogue follows these impoverished understandings of freedom and equality and concludes that conventions and laws are for suckers. Part of his pernicious influence is to persuade even his opponents that moral and constitutional scruples are forms of weakness.
The demagogue’s own weakness lies in the fact that most people, even most of his supporters, tend to live by the conventions that he disdains. He needs their support and craves their adoration, making him dependent on people he holds in contempt”
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The demagogue’s own weakness lies in the fact that most people, even most of his supporters, tend to live by the conventions that he disdains. He needs their support and craves their adoration, making him dependent on people he holds in contempt”
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