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An Analysis of Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last Man

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Artikelnr: SK0263771-SE20260527-055838 Kategori: Etikett:

Beskrivning

Beskrivning

Francis Fukuyama’s controversial 1992 book The End of History and the Last Man demonstrates an important aspect of creative thinking: the ability to generate hypotheses and create novel explanations for evidence. In the case of Fukuyama’s work, the central hypothesis and explanation he put forward were not, in fact, new, but they were novel in the academic and historical context of the time. Fukuyama’s central argument was that the end of the Cold War was a symptom of, and a vital waypoint in, a teleological progression of history. Interpreting history as “teleological” is to say that it is headed towards a final state, or end point: a state in which matters will reach an equilibrium in which things are as good as they can get. For Fukuyama, this would mean the end of “mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government”. This grand theory, which sought to explain the end of the Cold War through a single overarching hypothesis, made the novel step of resurrecting the German philosopher G.W.F. Hegel’s theory of history – which had long been ignored by practical historians and political philosophers – and applying it to current events.

Om boken

Om denna bok

An Analysis of Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last Man av Ian Jackson och Jason Xidias är en Pocket bok med 98 sidor på Engelska. Detta är den 1:a upplagan som utgavs 2017 av Taylor & Francis Ltd.

Produktinformation

Kategori
Historia & arkeologi
Bandtyp
Pocket
Språk
Engelska
ISBN
9781912127917
Upplaga
1
Utgiven
2017-07-15
Förlag
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Sidantal
98