Libertarian utopia in Chile, nineteenth and twentieth centuries

Authors

  • Rafael Gumucio

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-6568/2003-N6-245

Keywords:

freedom, equality, fraternity, positivist philosophy, utopia

Abstract

This article claims for today’s Chile the ideas of liberty, equality and fraternity as utopias, capable to transform the unacceptable of the present moment vindicating waking dreams and horizons of hope. It notes that not all utopia is liberating, calling for a Copernican revolution in politics, rescues egalitarian dreams of the nineteenth-century Chile, and declares that the humanist experiences of utopianism have tended to be undervalued. It concludes with a critique to the idolatry of market and consigning this period in the history of Chile as homologous to the Parliamentary Republic.

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Author Biography

Rafael Gumucio

Licenciado en Historia de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Diplomado de Estudios Avanzados de Historia de la Universidad de París, profesor de la Universidad Bolivariana

Published

2018-07-01

How to Cite

Gumucio, R. (2018). Libertarian utopia in Chile, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Polis (Santiago), (6). https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-6568/2003-N6-245

Issue

Section

Lente de aproximación