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Is There an American Ideology?
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12465 |
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BOOK WORLD
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7 / 1987 |
2,562 Words |
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Charles L. Griswold, Jr. Charles L. Griswold, Jr., is a philosophy professor at Howard
University. His most recent publication is Self-knowledge in
Plato's "Phaedrus" (Yale University Press, 1986). |
IDEOLOGY AND AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
John K. Roth and Robert C. Whittemore, eds.
Washington Institute Press, 1986.
256 pp., $21.95
What does it mean to be an American? The Fourth of July, which the nation is about to celebrate, calls for an answer. The question might profitably be pursued by contrasting it with another, famously philosophical, query: What does it mean to be human?
At first glance, the second question has nothing to do with the first. For it would seem that we could speculate at length about what it means to be human without ever asking what it means to be American, or for that matter, a member of any other regime. Indeed, countless philosophers have, and no doubt always will, proceed by theorizing about human nature without worrying much about the forms humans assume when impressed by certain "ideologies." Philosophers proceed thus not because they ignore the fact that they reside in a particular place and time, but on the grounds that concrete historical experiences are not necessarily implied by universal truths. And in Plato's terminology, the love of wisdom is the desire to know the eternal "forms," or universal principles of intelligibility.
Similarly, at first glance the question of what it means to be an American seems to have nothing to do with the venerable philosophical question of what it means to be human. A number of the authors of Ideology and American Experience, for example, write profitably about topics such as America's foreign policy and the American economy
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