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Postmodernism and Public Policy
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15 November 2001

Develops a naturalistic postmodern perspective to make constructive proposals about a wide range of topics now in public discussion.
One of America's preeminent systematic theologians, John B. Cobb Jr. examines a range of social issues in his latest groundbreaking work, Postmodernism and Public Policy. Cobb uses a naturalistic postmodern perspective to make constructive proposals about a wide range of topics in the public eye.
Postmodernism and Public Policy shows how a postmodern Christianity can contribute positively to thinking about religious and cultural pluralism, and how this can give direction to the educational enterprise. It proposes ways of understanding sex, gender, and race that take diversity seriously without lapsing into a debilitating relativism that inhibits political action. Arguing for a shift from individualism to thinking of persons-in-community, it proposes that the world be organized from the bottom up in communities of communities, and spells out what this implies for the political and economic orders and the relationship between them. Cobb shows that formulations on all these topics can be coherently interconnected and he develops the implications of such thinking for some specific ethical and political issues that now trouble the United States, such as abortion, physician-assisted suicide, and homosexuality.
"Written with the confidence of a master, the book generates a gravitational force field all its own: at once humble in its tone and stunning in its sweep." — Catherine Keller, author of Apocalypse Now and Then: A Feminist Guide to the End of the World
"Postmodernism is not just an intellectual development; it is a cultural reality making it very difficult to address social issues that require system change and not just cultural criticism. Cobb addresses this in a creative way." — Warren Copeland, Wittenberg University
Preface
Series Introduction
Introduction
1. Can Christians Contribute to the Postmodern World?
2. Religious Pluralism and Truth
3. Culture and Education
4. Gender and Sexuality
5. Nature, Community, and the Human Economy
6. Governance
7. Race and Class
8. Ethics and Pluralism
Notes
Note on Supporting Center
Index
SUNY Series in Constructive Postmodern Thought