"...it is both a clear and up-to-date attack on the proceduralist experiment and a new and sympathetic outline of the value commitments that are actually presupposed by the core positions of liberal political morality." Political Theory
"Liberal Purposes is a thoughtful, challenging, and clearly written critique of the dominant strand in contemporary liberalism written from within the liberal tradition itself." Choice
"As Galston's latest, best effort at liberal reparation, this work deserves the attention of those political and social theorists familiar with the contemporary discussion of liberalism in the writings of such prominent scholars as John Rawls, Ronald Dworkin, Alasdair MacIntyre, Michael Walzer, Roberto Unger, and Judith Shklar, not to mention many best known within political philosophy....Galston extends and deepens the current debates on liberal theory in a way that sociologists may find challenging and therefore helpful in rethinking their own theoretical analyses." Alan Woolfolk, Contemporary Sociology
"This is an important book, which addresses many of the central issues in liberal theory: the debate between foundationalists and nonfoundationalists, liberals and communitarians, neutralist liberals and non-neutralist liberals, and among diverse conceptions of equality. It is also refreshing in that it deals with the appropriate liberal response to pressing public policy issues, such as health care policy, education, distributive justice, and the treatment of nonliberal minorities." Margaret Moore, The Review of Politics