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The book that launched the modern American conservative movement, now available in trade paperback.
Editions for 1954 and 1967 by O. Handlin and others.
To many he speaks with unprecedented urgency. For Henry Adams at the turn of the twentieth century, as for his successors in the twenty-first, the relation of mind to a world remade by technology and geopolitical conflict largely determines the destiny of civil life. Henry Adams and the Need to Know presents fourteen essays that articulate Adams's ongoing interest to both scholarly and general readerships, stressing his eclecticism and his need to clarify the role of critical intelligence in public life.
"Over 2,000 entries covering the who, what, where, when and why of U.S. history."--Thumbnail.
A compelling explanation of how conservatism is no longer what its founders intended and how it has been transformed into a tool of materialist economics and emptied of much of its original meaning. During America's 19th-century Gilded Age, free-enterprise capitalist ideas distorted and deeply obscured traditional political conservatism. Conservatism today, argues distinguished historian Mario R. DiNunzio, is a grotesque version of the ideology crafted by its founders, including John Adams in America and Edmund Burke in England. This compelling book provides a survey of conservative thought and its transformation that originated in the late 19th century, exposing the influence of that transf...