A Review of How to be a Conservative by Roger Scruton

Volume 5|Issue 20| Spring 2017 |Book Reviews

Abstract

In this book Roger Scruton argues that the individualist tendency in liberalism represents a threat to those institutions from which individuals derive the elements of their personal identities, and that it is these elements that create group cohesion. Scruton derives his arguments from Hegel, Edmund Burke, Hobbes, Adam Smith, and Joseph de Maistre. However, in his later works, particularly in his 2007 A Political Philosophy: Arguments for Conservatism—his position on liberalism can be seen to change. He later uses Hayek, and moderates his critique of the effects arising from liberalisms policies on the traditional institutions of society.
Download Article Download Issue Cite this Article Subscribe for a year Cite this Article

​Professor of Moral and Political Philosophy at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies. He published in French two books on the American philosopher John Rawls, Etudes rawlsiennes: contrat et justice (2006); Le juste et ses normes: John Rawls et le concept du politique (2007). He is also author of many articles and chapters of books published in Arabic, English and French. 

× Citation/Reference
Arab Center
Harvard
APA
Chicago