Taylor is one of the world's pre-eminent experts on Hegel and brings to
his reflections on nationalism and federalism the fruits of a more
universal philosophical discourse rooted in the Enlightenment and
before. Its hallmarks are terms such as recognition, self-determination,
atomism, and modernity. Notwithstanding his long involvement in
philosophical reflections, Taylor has avoided the role of the disengaged
intellectual, always remaining close to political action and debate in
Canada. To his philosophical discourse, therefore, is added a sensitive
knowledge of Quebec society from the vantage point of an
English-speaking citizen with profound roots within it. Taylor suggests
that it will be necessary to think in terms of deep diversity if Canada
is to stay together in the twenty-first century. Eight of the essays,
published between 1965 and 1992, are drawn from the Queen's Quarterly,
edited scholarly books, a research study for the MacDonald Commission on
Canada's Economic and Political Future, and an English translation of
his submission to Quebec's Bélanger-Campeau Commission. The concluding
paper was written specially for this volume.