Acknowledgments
Introduction: Political Theory and Human Finitude
1. The Concept of a Narrative Practice as an Alternative to Objectivism
Necessity and Contingency in Modern Political Theory
Necessity and Contingency in Contemporary Political Theory
2. Scientific Practice and Its Implicit Critique of Objectivism
Intellectual Passions and Scientific Knowing
The Tacit Structure of Knowing
Convivial Practices and the Structure of Articulate Culture
3. The Written Word as an Experimental Source of Objectivism
Some Salient Characteristics of Oral Communication
Aspects of Literate Consciousness
Literate Objectivism and the Western Philosophical Tradition
4. Beyond Objectivism: The Logic of the Speech Act
Necessity and Contingency in Visual and Aural Contexts
Absolute Contingency and the Speech Act
Speech-Based Necessity and Politics
5. Speech, Place, and Narrative Practice
The Polis as a Place
Place as a General Concept
Paradigmatic Places for Narrative Political Practice
Conclusion: Speech, Place, and the Postmodern Public Realm
Notes
Bibliography
Index