Book detail: Conditions of liberty: civil society and its rivals is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
Written by the philosopher and social anthropologist Ernest Gellner, this work investigates the historical and ideological foundations of civil society. It explores how modern liberal democracies emerged and explains why a self-regulating, pluralistic society remains a relatively rare historical phenomenon. The text contrasts the unique characteristics of Western civil society, which relies on a balance of independent institutions, market economies, and individual freedoms, with various rival systems. These rivals include absolutist states, collectivist ideologies, and segmentary communities. Through comparative analysis, the book provides a theoretical framework for understanding the structural prerequisites and cultural conditions required to establish and maintain a free society.
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