Is There a Canadian Philosophy?
      Reflections on the Canadian Identity

        Contents

        Introduction
        1. Nationality and Universality (G.B. Madison)
        2. Nationalism and the Politics of Identity (P. Fairfield)
        3. The Bearers of Rights: Individuals or Collectives? (P. Fairfield)
        4. Democracy in Canada: 'Canada' as a Spontaneous Order (I. Harris)
        5. Rights, Sovereignty, and the Nation-State (I. Harris)

 

Publisher's Description

Is There a Canadian Philosophy? addresses the themes of community, culture, national identity, and universal human rights, taking the Canadian example as its focus. The authors argue that nations compelled to cope with increasing demands for group recognition may do so in a broadly liberal spirit without abandoning the principles that animate that spirit and without succumbing to the dangers associated with an illiberal, adversarial multiculturalism. They identify and describe a Canadian civic philosophy and attempt to show how this modus operandi of Canadian public life is capable of reconciling questions of collective identity and recognition with a commitment to individual rights and related principles of liberal democracy. They further argue that this philosophy is such as to serve as a model for nations around the world faced with internal complexities and growing demands for recognition from populations more diverse than at any previous time in their histories.