01638cam a22002531 45000010008000000030008000080050017000160080041000330100017000740400022000910500014001130820016001272450078001432500014002212600038002353000024002735000125002975040041004225050805004636500023012686500019012917000030013107100044013402644271BD-DhUL20170521134054.0710924s1967 nyu b 000 0 eng  a 67018277  aDLCcDLCdBD-DhUL00aJA76b.P600a320.01bPOL00aPolitical theory & social change.cEdited with an introd. by David Spitz. a[1st ed.] aNew York,bAtherton Press,c1967. axii, 303 p.c24 cm. a"Essays ... read at a series of panels ... at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association in 1966." aIncludes bibliographical references.0 aTruth and politics, by H. Arendt.--Static and dynamic society, by P. Kecskemeti.--Political science and political rationality, by D. Kettler.--Changing conceptions of political legitimacy; abandonment of theocracy in the Islamic world, by G. Lewy.--Constitutionalism in the sixteenth century; the Protestant Monarchomachs, by J. H. Franklin.--Theories of terrorism and the classical tradition, by E. V. Walter.--Civil disobedience; prerequisite for democracy in mass society, by C. Bay.--The obligation to disobey, by M. Walzer.--Democractic theory: ontology and technology, by C. B. Macpherson.--Social order and human ends; some central issues in the modern problem, by M. Q. Sibley.--Corporate authority and democratic theory, by P. Bachrach.--Facing up to intellectual pluralism, by J. N. Shklar. 0aPolitical science. 0aSocial change.1 aSpitz, David,d1916-eed.2 aAmerican Political Science Association.