Celebrating “Cosmopolitanism”

Travel Blog  •  Jim Benning  •  03.03.06 | 1:28 PM ET

On Saturday night, C-SPAN2’S Book TV will feature Ghana-born Princeton philosophy professsor Kwame Anthony Appiah discussing his book, Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers. It sounds like the kind of read that just might belong on the bookshelf of a good Lonely Planet-reading, sushi-eating, U.N-supporting, passport-carrying traveler.

Writes John Gray in the The Nation:

Appiah…seeks to revive cosmopolitanism, a view of humans as citizens of the world that was advanced by the Cynics in Greece in the fourth century BCE and elaborated by Stoic philosophers in Roman times. In Appiah’s view cosmopolitanism has two intertwined strands: the idea that we have obligations to other human beings above and beyond those to whom we are related by ties of family, kinship or formal citizenship; and an attitude that values others not just as specimens of universal humanity but as having lives whose meaning is bound up with particular practices and beliefs that are often different from our own. Appiah sees this cosmopolitan perspective re-emerging in the Enlightenment and expressed in the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Kant’s idea of a League of Nations.

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