The Balance of Consciousness
Eric Voegelin's Political Theory
214 pages | 6 x 9 | 1990
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Consciousness is at once the most obvious and mysterious feature of the human mind. Kenneth Keulman seeks a better understanding of its many dimensions through interpretations ofthe ideas of the twentieth-century philosopher Eric Voegelin, who viewed the complexity of modern consciousness as the result of a distinctive form of evolution combining genetic change with cultural history.Voegelin's unique contribution to political theory, Keulman shows, comes from his development of an approach to history rooted in a study of the symbolisms of the history of order. It is because the problems of order in society arise from the order of consciousness that the theory of consciousness can be placed at the center of political theory.Keulman's interpretation encompasses not only Voegelin's published writings but also a substantial body of unpublished material to which Voegelin gave him access before his death in 1985, including portions of what was to become Volume V of Order and History.
Kenneth Keulman is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Loyola University, New Orleans.