Description: "In this work, the prominent political philosopher Philip Pettit embarks on a massive undertaking to offers major new accounts of the foundations of the state and the nature of justice. In doing so Pettit builds a new theory of what the state is and what it ought to be, addresses the normative question of how justice serves as a measure of the success of a state, and the way it should operate in relation to its citizens and other people"--
Review Quotes: "In its ambition and execution, The State resembles such canonical works of political philosophy as Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan (1651) or Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Du contrat social (1762) and will likely be counted among them in time."---Adam Coleman, The Irish Times