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    Sound political judgement is the product of experience, n... — Carmelics
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    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Challenges→Civil society cannot be simplified, rendered fully transparent, or governed by abstract rules alone

    Sound political judgement is the product of experience, not abstract reasoning

    Democracy & GovernanceVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsDemocracy & Governance

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    SEP: wollstonecraft
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    Of the disagreements between Price and Wollstonecraft, on the one hand, and Burke, on the other, one of the deepest was over their respective view of the nature of civil society and of political power in general. The two friends believed that government, the rule of law, and all human relations could be simplified, explicated, and rendered transparent, and both were convinced that this was the task ahead for all lovers of liberty. For Burke, on the contrary, civil society consisted of countless

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