Virtuous Hypocrisy
Virtuous Hypocrisy
paperback
Published:
28 March, 2025
paperback
Published:
28 March, 2025
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Description
Speak your mind, always. Hypocrisy challenges this rule of authenticity, and for this very reason hypocrisy is judged negatively, as intentional inconsistency between thoughts and words, between belief and behaviour. Does this make the hypocrite a silent saboteur of the moral order? A person who hides in the shadows and erodes the foundations of trust? Without trust there is no society, no friendship, no love.
But is hypocrisy always reprehensible? Nadia Urbinati argues that society, friendship and love all require a measure of hypocrisy – what she calls ‘virtuous hypocrisy’. If we were always uncompromisingly honest in public, it would be a disaster for everyone. Sometimes it is better to refrain from speaking your mind: hypocrisy can be a form of civility and a sign of maturity and autonomy. And in politics too, a degree of hypocrisy and inconsistency is essential. The important thing is to understand when and within what limits hypocrisy can be justified, and to avoid it becoming systematic and leading to outright lying and deception. Urbinati does not praise hypocrisy unconditionally but argues that a degree of hypocrisy is essential to the smooth functioning of our social and political life.
This perceptive reappraisal of a much-maligned concept will be of interest to students and academics in politics and political theory and to a wide general readership.
But is hypocrisy always reprehensible? Nadia Urbinati argues that society, friendship and love all require a measure of hypocrisy – what she calls ‘virtuous hypocrisy’. If we were always uncompromisingly honest in public, it would be a disaster for everyone. Sometimes it is better to refrain from speaking your mind: hypocrisy can be a form of civility and a sign of maturity and autonomy. And in politics too, a degree of hypocrisy and inconsistency is essential. The important thing is to understand when and within what limits hypocrisy can be justified, and to avoid it becoming systematic and leading to outright lying and deception. Urbinati does not praise hypocrisy unconditionally but argues that a degree of hypocrisy is essential to the smooth functioning of our social and political life.
This perceptive reappraisal of a much-maligned concept will be of interest to students and academics in politics and political theory and to a wide general readership.
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781509565986 |
| ISBN10 | 1509565981 |
| Number Of Pages | 114 |
| Item Weight | 159 g |
| Product Dimensions | 137 x 213 x 13 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | John Wiley and Sons Ltd |
| Format | paperback |
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Media Reviews
"A highly instructive essay by one of our foremost political theorists. Nadia Urbinati provides at once a masterful analysis of understandings of hypocrisy in the history of ideas, an account of its essential role in representative democracies, and an argument for the much-maligned practice of “political correctness”."
Jan-Werner Müller, Princeton University
Author's Bio
Nadia Urbinati is Professor of Political Theory at Columbia University.