000 a
999 _c31984
_d31984
008 230420b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9788178246611
082 _a306
_bBIL
100 _aBilgrami, Akeel
245 _aCapital, culture and the commons
260 _bPermanent Black,
_aRanikhet :
_c2022
300 _a107 p. ;
_bill.,
_c20 cm
365 _b395.00
_cINR
_d01
520 _aThe idea of the commons is the idea of something shared without rivalry, whether it is land or the environment or knowledge. The survival of the commons depends on human co-operation. In Culture, Capital, and the Commons, Akeel Bilgrami asks the question: Can human co-operation be enforced by regulation, by policing and punishing non-cooperation? Invoking ideas in thinkers ranging from Nietzsche and Marx to Wittgenstein, Foucault, and Bishop Tutu, the book explores the extent to which regulation and the law depends on a background of the cultural commons that is implicit and inarticulate, and the extent to which the cultural commons is itself sustained by overcoming alienated human relations.
650 _aHuman co-operation
650 _aRegulation
650 _aNietzsche
650 _aMarx
650 _aWittgenstein
650 _aFoucault
650 _aBishop Tutu
942 _2ddc
_cBK