Modern age, the first twenty-five years : a selection /
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Imprint: | Indianapolis : LibertyPress, c1988. |
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Description: | xx, 893 p. ; 26 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/966372 |
Table of Contents:
- Foreword
- Editor's Note
- Prologue
- 1. Apology for a New Review
- I. Concepts of Conservatism
- 2. Life Without Prejudice
- 3. The Restoration of Tradition
- 4. Cogitations in a Roman Theatre
- 5. A Place To Live In
- 6. Freedom, Tradition, Conservatism
- 7. The Age of Liberalism
- 8. The Divine Right of Minorities
- 9. Majority Rule Revisited
- 10. On Equality and Inequality
- 11. Freedom, Inequality, Primitivism, and the Division of Labor
- 12. Conservatives and Libertarians: Uneasy Cousins
- II. Conservative Thinkers
- 13. Edmund Burke, the Perennial Political Philosopher
- 14. Disraeli and Modern Conservatism
- 15. "Liberty by Taste":Tocqueville's Search for Freedom
- 16. William Graham Sumner and the Old Republic
- 17. Josiah Royce and American Conservatism
- 18. The Humanism of Irving Babbitt Revisited
- 19. Paul Elmer More and the Redemption of History
- 20. T. S. Eliot and the Critique of Liberalism
- 21. Willmoore Kendall: Conservative Iconoclast
- 22. Leo Strauss and American Conservatism
- 23. Voegelin Read Anew: Political Philosophy in the Age of Ideology
- III. Roots of American Order
- 24. The Heresy of Equality: Bradford Replies to Jaffa
- 25. Equality, Justice, and the American Revolution: In Reply to Bradford's "The Heresy of Equality"
- 26. The Rhetoric of Alexander Hamilton
- 27. Orestes Brownson and the Political Culture of American Democracy
- 28. They Took Their Stand: The Agrarian View After Fifty Years
- 29. World War II and the War Guilt Question
- 30. The End of the Old America
- 31. The United States as a "Revolutionary Society"
- IV. Law, Legislation, and Liberty
- 32. Criminal Character and Mercy
- 33. How Much Justice?
- 34. Law, Legislation, and Liberty,: Hayek's Completed Trilogy
- 35. Government by Judiciary
- 36. The Well-Intending Judges
- 37. The Supreme Court's Civil Theology
- 38. Judicial Verbicide: An Affront to the Constitution
- 39. American Conservatism and the "Prayer" Decisions
- V. The Place of Christianity
- 40. The Freedom of Man in the Freedom of the Church
- 41. Political Theory: The Place of Christianity
- 42. Faith and Reason
- 43. Liberalism and Christianity
- 44. The Western Dilemma: Calvin or Rousseau?
- 45. The Institutional Church and Political Activity
- 46. Christian Faith and Totalitarian Rule
- 47. Dawson on Education in Christian Culture
- VI. Not for Marx
- 48. Not for Marx
- 49. Fifty Years of Communist Power
- 50. Two Socialisms
- 51. Marxism, Anarchism, and the New Left
- 52. Marxist Revisionism: A Commentary
- 53. The Cold War of the Mind: Regimentation in East Germany
- VII. The Anatomy of Terror
- 54. The Anatomy of Perdition
- 55. The Kravchenko Case
- 56. The Last of the Anarchists
- 57. The Purloined-Letter Syndrome
- 58. Europe on the Eve
- 59. Albert Speer and the Nazi War Plants
- VIII. The Realm of Education
- 60. On Classical Studies
- 61. The Educated Man
- 62. The Word and the Rope
- 63. The Circular Travels of the Professors
- 64. Intrusion into the Soul of a Child
- 65. Our Disposable Past: A Protest
- 66. Paul Goodman and the Reform of Education
- 67. Solzhenitsyn at Harvard
- IX. Art and Criticism
- 68. The Word That Is Spoken
- 69. The International Role of Art in Revolutionary Times
- 70. Decorum in the Novel
- 71. Pater Revisited
- 72. Dostoevsky-Our Contemporary
- 73. Irving Babbitt and the Aestheticians
- 74. Henry James and the Sense of the Past
- 75. The Crack-Up of American Optimism: Vachel Lindsay, the Dante of the Fundamentalists
- 76. The Classicism of Robert Frost
- 77. James Joyce and Aesthetic Gnosticism
- Epilogue
- 78. Modern Age in a Changing World