Charles Taylor

Thinking and Living Deep Diversity

By (author) Mark Redhead

Not available to order

Publication date:

11 March 2002

Length of book:

272 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

ISBN-13: 9780742521261

Over the past four decades, Charles Taylor's work as an intellectual historian, epistemologist, and normative political theorist has made him a leading figure in contemporary social philosophy. In Charles Taylor: Thinking and Living Deep Diversity, Mark Redhead examines the problem of political fragmentation, the problem of how to accommodate narrowly defined groups while promoting allegiance to a larger polity, through an analysis of Taylor's thought and politics. Redhead argues that Taylor's work evinces a gallant, though unsucessful confrontation with fragmentation that dramatically illuminates the politcal, moral and epistemological tensions at play in a problem of political fragmentation. Charles Taylor is both a major contribution to contemporary debates about liberalism, group rights, and multiculturalism as well as a path breaking study of the politics, life, and thought of Charles Taylor.
Mark Redhead places the theme of 'deep diversity' at the center of his study of Charles Taylor; he attempts to elucidate Taylor via a 'deep analysis,' treating Taylor not only as a thinker, with roots, e.g., in Hegel, but taking very seriously Taylor's involvement in Canadian politics, his Catholic faith, as well as his personal experience growing up in an Anglo-French Quebec household. Redhead manages not only to shed much new light on Taylor, but his book serves as a model for the study of a serious thinker in terms of the interaction of life and thought. Without ever being reductionist Redhead gives us a very rich picture of Taylor—and some astute reflections on the limitations of Taylor as a political philosopher. Redhead's study of Taylor and 'deep diversity' must be judged 'deeply successful.'