This invaluable book examines politics, leadership, and the effect each has on the other. Tucker argues that politics is more usefully defined as leadership than as the exercise of power.
Sissela Bok (born Sissela Myrdal on 2 December 1934) is a Swedish-born American philosopher and ethicist, the daughter of two Nobel Prize winners: Gunnar Myrdal who won the Economics prize with Friedrich Hayek in 1974, and Alva Myrdal who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1982.
She received her B.A. and M.A. in psychology from George Washington University in 1957 and 1958, and her Ph.D. in philosophy from Harvard University in 1970. Formerly a Professor of Philosophy at Brandeis University, Sissela Bok is currently a Senior Visiting Fellow at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, Harvard School of Public Health.
I read this for our monthly study group. It was a disappointing read in that the author, in her attempt to identify values common to all cultures, proceeded to attenuate the concept beyond the point that was acceptable to the group, or at least to this reader. Her attempt to find a minimal set of values flounders by virtue of the goal of the exercise. The result was a set of values that limited the usefulness of the concept of value.