Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction: political philosophy in the twentieth century
- Part I The three basic alternatives in the early twentieth century
- Part II ??migr?? responses to World War II
- Part III The revival of liberal political philosophy
- 8 Friedrich Hayek on the nature of social order and law
- 9 Michael Oakeshott: the philosophical skeptic in an impatient age
- 10 Moral pluralism and liberal democracy: Isaiah Berlin's heterodox liberalism
- 11 H. L. A. Hart: a twentieth-century Oxford political philosopher
- 12 John Rawls and the task of political philosophy
- 13 Richard Rorty: liberalism, irony, and social hope
- Part IV Critiques of liberalism
- Index
- References
9 - Michael Oakeshott: the philosophical skeptic in an impatient age
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction: political philosophy in the twentieth century
- Part I The three basic alternatives in the early twentieth century
- Part II ??migr?? responses to World War II
- Part III The revival of liberal political philosophy
- 8 Friedrich Hayek on the nature of social order and law
- 9 Michael Oakeshott: the philosophical skeptic in an impatient age
- 10 Moral pluralism and liberal democracy: Isaiah Berlin's heterodox liberalism
- 11 H. L. A. Hart: a twentieth-century Oxford political philosopher
- 12 John Rawls and the task of political philosophy
- 13 Richard Rorty: liberalism, irony, and social hope
- Part IV Critiques of liberalism
- Index
- References
Summary
Michael Oakeshott was born on December 11, 1901, in Kent, England, and died December 19, 1990, at his cottage in the village of Acton on the Dorset coast. He distinguished himself as an undergraduate at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge, and then as a fellow of the college and lecturer in history. From the 1920s he remained at Cambridge, except for service in the British army in World War II, until the late 1940s. Thereafter he spent a brief period in Oxford before appointment as professor of political science at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) in 1951. There he taught in and convened the Government Department, introducing the MSc in the History of Political Thought. This one-year degree program attracted students from many parts of the world, especially Canada and the United States. Although he officially retired in 1968, Oakeshott continued to participate in the fall term of the program, presenting papers in its general seminar until 1980.
Oakeshott was an extraordinary teacher and lecturer, enjoying exchanges with students that faculty half his age could not match. In old age he never forgot what it was to be young. He was charmed by the exuberance of undergraduates as they were charmed by him. The period from the 1950s to the 1980s was a fertile period for the study of political theory in the Government Department at LSE. Oakeshott had attracted an illustrious group of scholars and teachers: John Charvet, Maurice Cranston, Elie Kedourie, Wolfgang von Leyden, Kenneth Minogue, Robert Orr, and others.
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- Information
- Political Philosophy in the Twentieth CenturyAuthors and Arguments, pp. 142 - 153Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011