Thomas Nagel's previous Oxford books are: The View from Nowhere (1989), which sold nearly 4000 copies and What Does It All Mean? (1988, paperback 1989) which sold a total of nearly 11,000 copies.
"There is much in this short and illuminating book to stimulate
serious thought about a wide range of issues in contemporary
political theory. Nagel's style is deceptively simple, masking an
unusual depth and complexity of view....For those who have read
widely in the recent literature of political philosophy, it is a
rare treat."--American Political Science Review
"A clear, sometimes subtle, and elegant book."--Society
"Thomas Nagel is just about the most interesting philosopher of our
day. Without descending to rhetorical tricks, he conveys a
wonderful sense of the urgency of the issues he writes
about....[Nagel's] deftness of touch and delicacy of intellectual
imagination are exactly what the subject demands."--Times Literary
Supplement
"[Nagel] is focused on the right issues, and his discussion of them
is both lucid and illuminating. The book is certainly required
reading for those working in the area of political
philosophy."--The Review of Politics
"On all these subjects [Nagel discusses] we get tough-minded,
honest, insightful, imaginative thought expressed in lucid prose,
fully accessible to the nonprofessional, and clearly relevant to
the most important political issues of our time. In a more rational
world this book would have the best-seller status that Allen
Bloom's had."--Philosophical Review
"There is much in this short and illuminating book to stimulate
serious thought about a wide range of issues in contemporary
political theory. Nagel's style is deceptively simple, masking an
unusual depth and complexity of view....For those who have read
widely in the recent literature of political philosophy, it is a
rare treat."--American Political Science Review
"A clear, sometimes subtle and elegant book."--Society
"Thomas Nagel is just about the most interesting philosopher of our
day. Without descending to rhetorical tricks, he conveys a
wonderful sense of the urgency of the issues he writes
about....[Nagel's] deftness of touch and delicacy of intellectual
imagination are exactly what the subject demands."--Times Literary
Supplement
"[Nagel] is focused on the right issues, and his discussion of them
is both lucid and illuminating. The book is certainly required
reading for those working in the area of political
philosophy."--The Review of Politics
"On all these subjects [Nagel discusses] we get tough-minded,
honest, insightful, imaginative thought expressed in lucid prose,
fully accessible to the nonprofessional, and clearly relevant to
the most important political issues of our time. In a more rational
world this book would have the best-seller status that Allen
Bloom's had."--Philosophical Review
"This is a rich and fascinating book whose meditations are at once
personal and philosophical, admirably honest in the way they
grapple with extraordinarily difficult problems, and despite their
complications and obscurities, never stagnant and often compelling.
Even for those who do not accept the Pauline moral psychology that
structures the book's argument, there is much to learn from its
twists and turns."--Ethics
"The work is clear, concise, and replete with nice discussions of
current issues..."--Teaching Philosophy
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