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On Common Interests: A Political Philosophy

Contributor(s): Ryder, John (Author)

ISBN: 9798765143537

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic

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Pub Date: June 25, 2026

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.75" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 1.07 lbs) 368 pages

BISAC Categories:

Philosophy | Political | Social

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This book offers a political philosophy that is grounded in the overlapping sets of interests that people share, interests that provide social cohesion and define our individual aspirations and social activities.

Brief description: John Ryder has been a professor of philosophy and a senior administrator at several universities in the United States and abroad. He is the author or editor of over one hundred publications, as well as a former president of the Alliance of Universities for Democracy, and co-founder of the Central European Pragmatist Forum.

Review Quotes:

"Ryder develops a detailed and tightly reasoned pragmatic alternative to political philosophies constructed on left/right/center and liberal/anti-liberal assumptions. His innovative approach is pluralistic and ecumenical. He urges consensus-building motivated not by what people think or believe, but by how their experiences shape their lives as individuals and members of communities." --Larry A. Hickman, former director, Center for Dewey Studies, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, USA

"This is a radical exercise of the political imagination, in the sense that the author at every turn attempts to get to the root of the matter, digging deeper than any other contemporary theorist is disposed to do. John Ryder is unafraid to draw out disconcertingly novel implications from his historical observations and theoretical conclusions, to entertain utterly unorthodox possibilities. He does so in an historically informed, philosophically rigorous, and rhetorically engaging manner. This is a very serious and, in the best sense, disturbing work. His position does not neatly fit into any traditional category-so much the worse for those categories, so much to the credit of this author." --Vincent Colapietro, professor emeritus of philosophy, Pennsylvania State University, USA

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