2024
DOI: 10.3390/philosophies9010022
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Reason, Emotion, and the Crisis of Democracy in British Philosophy of the 1930s

Matthew Sterenberg

Abstract: This article examines how British philosophers of the 1930s grappled with the relationship between reason, emotion, and democratic citizenship in the context of a perceived “crisis of democracy” in Europe. Focusing especially on Bertrand Russell, Susan Stebbing, and John Macmurray, it argues that philosophers working from diverse philosophical perspectives shared a sense that the crisis of democracy was simultaneously a crisis of reason and one of emotion. They tended to frame this crisis in terms of three int… Show more

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