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Review: Moral Clarity

Susan Neiman is a current ‘hot-ticket’ philosopher. But how valuable are her insights?

August 20, 2009 12:21
Susan Neiman — accessible or agitprop? She will be in conversation with Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks at Jewish Book Week 2010

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

2 min read

By Susan Neiman
The Bodley Head, £20

In Susan Neiman’s lexicon, idealism is “the belief that the world can be improved by means of ideals expressing states of reality that are better than the ones we currently experience”.

She seeks to reinstate it among the left after so many withdrew from active engagement for a protracted, post-modern sulk following the collapse of the Soviet Union. Their reasoning seemingly went: if that’s where political idealism leads, better stay at home reading Derrida or watching the world go to hell in a handcart on TV than try improving it.

That retreat from the moral high ground, argues Neiman, allowed its occupation by the right, happy to drape their imperialistic ambitions and prejudices over the ideals discarded by the left, thereby better to disguise their true, invidious nature.