Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors
Ordering information
Table of Contents
Comments
Does the End of Totalitarianism
Signify the End of Ideology?
Ira Katznelson
557
Socialism and Capitalism, Left
and Right
Steven Lukes
571
Rethinking the Past, Rehoping
the Future
Robert Heilbroner
579
Transition in Eastern Europe Pavel Campeanu 587
What Does It Mean to Be an
"American"?
Michael Walzer
591
Social Theory and the Second
Biological Revolution
Alan Wolfe
615
The Effects of Prevalent Moral
Conceptions
Thomas W. Pogge
649
Recent Developments in
Economic Theory
Duncan K. Foley
665
Learning the Meaning of a
Dollar: Conservation Principles
and the Social Theory of Value
in Economic Theory
Philip Mirowski
689
The Comfort of Despair Pavel Campeanu 719
Balancing Freedom and Order:
On Adolph Lowe's Political
Harald Hagermann
Economics
and Heinz D. Kurz
733
Personal Sales and the
Instrumentalization of Life
Guy Oakes
755
Notes on Contributors
(at time of publication)
Pavel Campeanu, a member of the Group for Social Dialogue in Bucharest, is the author of The Genesis of the Stalinist Social Order (1988).
Duncan K. Foley is professor of economics at Barnard College, Columbia University, and the author of Understanding Capital: Marx's Economic Theory (1986).
Jeffrey C. Goldfarb is professor of sociology in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. His most recent book is Beyond Glasnost: The Post-Totalitarian Mind (1989).
Harald Hagemann is professor of economics at Hohenheim University, Stuttgart, Germany.
Robert Heilbroner is Norman Thomas Professor Emeritus in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. His most recent book is Behind the Veil of Economics (1988).
Ira Katznelson, Henry A. and Louise Loeb Professor of Political Science in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research, is currently visiting scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation.
Heinz D. Kurz, professor of economics at the University of Graz, Austria, is presently Theodor Heuss Professor at the New School for Social Research. His most recent book is Capital, Distribution, and Effective Demand (1990).
Steven Lukes is professor of social theory at the European University Institute in Florence. His Moral Conflict and Politics will be published shortly.
Philip Mirowski is Carl Koch Professor of Economics and the History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Notre Dame. His most recent book is More Heat Than Light (1989).
Guy Oakes is Kvernland Professor in the School of Business at Monmouth College in New Jersey. His most recent book is The Soul of the Salesman: The Moral Ethos of Personal Sales (1990).
Thomas W. Pogge is associate professor of philosophy at Columbia University and visiting scholar in the Philosophy Department at Harvard Univeristy. He is the author of Realizing Rawls (1989).
Michael Walzer is professor of social science at the Institue for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. His most recent book is The Company of Critics (1988).
Alan Wolfe is Michael E. Gellert Professor of Sociology and Political
Science and dean of the Graduate Faculty at the New School for Social
Research. He is the author of Whose Keeper? Social Science
and Moral Obligation (1989).