Michael F. Hickman teaches political philosophy and law. He is a lawyer and member of the Bar of South Carolina
"""The centrality of Husserl within contemporary philosophy has long been recognized. What we have lacked is a sustained reflection on the way it intersects with political theory. By thinking through the meaning of Husserl’s notion of a 'life-world' Michael Hickman has illuminated the connection with the lived experience of political community. This is a brilliant and original contribution that offers a fresh perspective on the deepest conflicts that politics confronts, as well as its prospects for bridging them. Hickman returns Husserl to the crisis from which his own reflection set forth."" David Walsh, Professor of Politics, The Catholic University of America ""Michael Hickman makes a compelling argument for the primacy of what Aristotle calls ethos for contemporary questions of political legitimacy – a fascinating application of the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl to the most hotly debated issues of moral diversity or pluralism being discussed within contemporary political theory."" Ryan R. Holston, Professor and Jonathan M. Daniels ’61 Chair, Virginia Military Institute ""Through a careful study of Edmund Husserl’s philosophy, Michael F. Hickman offers an original argument that the life world for Husserl is coterminous with the political community. Engaging with figures such as Kant, Rawls, Aristotle and Aquinas along the way, Hickman gives a careful and creative analysis of the mode of givenness of political phenomena, overcomes the overly abstract understanding of politics in liberal political theory, and gives a penetrating account of the nature of political reflection with the idea of the ‘political quasi-epochē.’ A landmark work in the phenomenology of the political.” Philip J. Harold, Dean of Constantin College and Professor of Politics, University of Dallas ""Searching for resources to address the crisis of liberalism, Michael Hickman looks back to Edmund Husserl's phenomenology as a way to recover a humane polity. According to Hickman, we have lost a common world akin to Aristotle's complete and self-sufficient political community and where we can perceive one another as people rather than objects. Finding faults with both ideal liberal theory and political realism, Hickman offers a new way to account for political identity and legitimacy that can bolster and steady liberal democracies. Innovative and thoughtful, Husserlian Phenomenology and Contemporary Political Realism provides a fresh theoretical approach to the problems of liberalism and how they could be resolved."" Lee Trepanier, Chair and Professor of Political Science, Samford University"