"Menachem Mautner is the Danielle Rubinstein Professor of Comparative Civil Law and Jurisprudence at the Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv University. He holds a LL.B and a LL.M from the Faculty of Law of Tel Aviv University, and a LL.M. and J.S.D. from Yale Law School. He is the author of six books, including Law and the Culture of Israel published in 2011. (An Italian version, Dirito e Cultura in Israele, translated with an introduction by Daniela Bifulco and Fulvio Cortese, was published in 2014 by Franco Angeli, Milano.) Mautner has edited six books, and published over 90 articles and chapters in books in Israel, the United States and Britain (including in the law reviews of Yale, Michigan and Cornell universities). In 2014 he served as head of the ""Sapir Prize of Literature Committee"", the Israeli equivalent of the British Man Booker Prize for Fiction."
An important and thoughtful book. Arguing that liberalism is not just about individual rights but also about personal growth and development, Mautner maintains that its ultimate goal is the enrichment and widening of human potentialities in all spheres of social life. In true Renaissance fashion, this book will remind its readers that the liberal project is not merely a legalistic device, but has the spheres of culture, creativity and the arts and their enjoyment as its core aim of human development. - Shlomo Avineri, Hebrew University of Jerusalem In Menachem Mautner's compelling genealogy of liberal thought, the contemplation of the arts and humanities is essential to the pursuit of an ideal life. His appraisal is as accessible as it is distinctive, supplying an urgently needed reminder that the pursuit of art is indispensable to individual happiness and social progress. Anyone seeking a corrective to the current belief in some quarters that art has become superfluous cannot do better than begin with this brilliant and deeply researched volume. - Lee Bollinger, Columbia University, U.S.A.