Robert Paul Wolff
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article or section has multiple issues. Please help improve the article or discuss these issues on the talk page.
|
Robert Paul Wolff (born 1933) is a twentieth century political philosopher and individualist anarchist[1]. Wolff has written widely on many topics political philosophy such as Marxism, tolerance, liberalism, political justification and democracy. Wolff is also well known as a scholar of the work of Kant.
[edit] Work
After the enormous renewal of interest in normative political philosophy in the Anglo-American world after the publication of John Rawls's A Theory of Justice, Wolff made pointed criticisms of this work from a roughly Marxist perspective. In 1977, Wolff published Understanding Rawls: A Critique and Reconstruction of A Theory of Justice which takes dead aim at the extent to which Rawls's theory takes its cue from existing practice, convention and status quo social science. Insofar as A Theory of Justice forecloses critiques of capitalist social relations, private property and the market economy, Wolff concludes that Rawls's project amounts to a form of apology for the status quo.
In The Poverty of Liberalism (ISBN 0-8070-0583-5), Wolff pointed out the inconsistencies rife in twentieth century liberal and conservative doctrines. In this text, Wolff takes John Stuart Mill's seminal works, On Liberty and Principles of Political Economy as starting points.
Also widely read is In Defense of Anarchism (The first two editions sold more than 200,000 copies, ISBN 0-520-21573-7). The argument in this work is that if we assume a robust conception of individual autonomy then it appears that there can be no de jure legitimate state. Wolff would later recall that he received all sorts of unlikely praise for this work, particularly from the likes of many on the political right, such as libertarians and anarcho-capitalists.
Wolff extended his advocacy of democracy to university governance in The Ideal of the University (Boston: Beacon, 1971, ISBN 0-8070-3189-5), in which he argues, against rising marketization and external encroachment, that universities should be primarily governed by faculty and students.
Within the philosophy profession, Wolff is better known for his Kant scholarship, particularly his books Kant's Theory of Mental Activity: A Commentary on the Transcendental Analytic of the Critique of Pure Reason and The Autonomy of Reason: A Commentary on Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals (ISBN 0-06-131792-6). He is also a noted commentator on the works of Karl Marx, where his works include Understanding Marx: A Reconstruction and Critique of Capital (ISBN 0-691-07678-2) and Moneybags Must Be So Lucky: On the Structure of Capital (ISBN 0-87023-616-4 ), an analysis of the rhetorical and literary techniques employed by Marx in Das Kapital. His textbook About Philosophy (ISBN 0-13-085393-3) is used widely in introductory college philosophy courses.
Wolff is also distinguished as a white man who transitioned from the philosophy department to the department of Afro-American studies of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, which is chronicled and discussed in his book Autobiography of an Ex-White Man: Learning a New Master Narrative for America (Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2005, ISBN 1-58046-180-8).
In 1990, Wolff founded University Scholarships for South African Students, an organization devoted to promoting opportunities in higher education within South Africa for disadvantaged South African students. Since its creation, USSAS has assisted in providing funding and educational opportunities for thousands of students in South Africa. The program is, in many ways, a realization of the democratic values about which Wolff has written for much of his career.
[edit] References
- ^ Paterson, R.W. K. Authority, Autonomy and the Legitimate State. Journal of Applied Philosophy, Vol. 9, No. 1, 1992