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The Wilsonian Legacy
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15784 |
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BOOK WORLD
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1 / 1989 |
2,151 Words |
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Paul Gottfried Paul Gottfried is a senior editor of the Modern Thought
section of The World & I and author of The Search for
Historical Meaning: Hegel and the Postwar American Right. |
THE PRESENT AGE
Progress and Anarchy in Modern America
Robert Nisbet
Harper and Row, 1988
145 + xii pp., $15.95
There are two ways to read Robert Nisbet's recent book, The Present Age: Progress and Anarchy in Modern America as a medley of occasional essays by a distinguished social theorist and as a sustained argument against modern America, particularly its political life. The book recapitulates Nisbet's concerns from previous decades expressed in works going back to The Quest for Community in 1952. Once again he speaks of the threat to established community from economic modernization and centralized administration, the attack on standards and symbols of authority by the bureaucratic national state, and the supplanting of traditional belief systems by collectivist ideologies.
In none of these concerns is Nisbet unique. He is by self-declaration a social traditionalist--albeit a religious freethinker like David Hume, whose combination of philosophical skepticism and social conservatism he deeply admires. Nisbet is, moreover, a traditionalist who makes copious references to those, living and dead, from whom he draws insights and to whom he feels in some ways akin. Though his arguments often parallel the views of Michael Oakeshott (whom he quotes in earlier works) about rationalism in politics, one difference between the two thinkers is stylistic. Oakeshott writes cryptically in what seem extended soliloquies; Nisbet, by contrast, offers painless, accessible prose full of tributes to his teachers and
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