John von Heyking, professor of political science at the University of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, is author of Augustine and Politics as Longing in the World and Friendship and Politics: Essays in Political Thought, and editor of two volumes in the Collected Works of Eric Voegelin series. Thomas Heilke is professor of political science and director of the Center for Global and International Studies at the University of Kansas, USA. His many published works include From Ideologies to Public Philosophies and Great Ideas/Great Schemes: Political Ideologies in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Besides the editors, the contributors are Dan Avnon, Toivo Koivukoski, Andras Lanczi, Erik Nevue, Tilo Schabert, David E. Tabachnick and Alexander Thumfart.
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"These essays, one by Schabert and eight from those working from his insights, draw productively from ancient and modern philosophers and theologians to illuminate aspects of politics, particularly where specific persons play a leading role."--D.J. Maletz, CHOICE "The essays collected in the volume The Primacy of Persons in Politics by editors John von Heyking and Thomas Heilke, provide an in-depth overview of the meaning, the impact, the breadth and relevance of Schabert's work This collection allows us to discover a thinker seeking to re-orient our contemporary approach to politics and its study in a forceful and profound way by bringing us back to persons."--Society ""This is precisely the sort of book that all political scientists should read. Tilo Schabert's work, and the elaboration of it in this volume, offers theoretical tools for understanding the world of politics that are missing from the positivist approach. Not only will this affirm the 'usefulness' of political theory to non-political theorists, it might also remind political theorists themselves to re-engage the 'empirical' aspect of their own vocation. This volume is a testament to the continued salience of political theory and should be required reading for all those who aspire to a career in the discipline."--Richard Avramenko, assistant professor of political science, University of Wisconsin-Madison"--

