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Champion of Reason
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18236 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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10 / 1990 |
2,767 Words |
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William O''Neill William L. O'Neill is a professor of history at Rutgers
University and is the author of American High: The Years of
Confidence, 1945-1960 and A Better World: Stalinism and the
American Intellectuals. |
CONVICTIONS
Sidney Hook
Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1990
310 pp., $ 24.95
The late Sidney Hook was one of the most remarkable figures in American academic life, almost from the time he began teaching philosophy at New York University in 1927 until his death last year at the age of eighty-seven. This was not so much because of his technical excellence as a philosopher but rather on account of his contributions to important national debates, his vigor as a polemicist, and his ability to write about complex ideas with clarity and force. Many of his twenty-one books were about Marx or Marxism, but he had a wide range of interests. His best or best-known books include The Hero in History, Heresy Yes, Conspiracy No - a highly controversial book on the limits of free expression - and Pragmatism and the Tragic Sense of Life. The areas to which he paid the greatest attention were Marxism, initially as a believer, later as the ideology's most powerful American critic; individual freedom; pragmatism, which he had studied under John Dewey, and education, an interest that also owed much to Dewey.
The Right to Die.
Hook had been famous among intellectuals and academicians since the 1930s, but in his last years he became more generally known as an advocate of the right to die. On March 1, 1987 the New York Times published an op-ed piece by Hook "In Defense of Voluntary Euthanasia," which attracted widespread attention and led him to write more on the subject. Hook, who chose the essays in this
... (1991 of 15836 Characters)
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