Publisher Description
More than just a huge #1 bestseller, this is one of the great and vitally important books of our time. Allan Bloom, a professor of social thought at the University of Chicago and a noted translator of Plato and Rousseau, argues that the social and political crisis of twentieth century America is really an intellectual crisis. From the universities’ lack of purpose to their students’ lack of learning, from the jargon of liberation to the supplanting of reason by “creativity,” Bloom shows how American democracy has unwittingly played host to vulgarized Continental ideas of nihilism and despair, of relativism disguised as tolerance. Bloom demonstrates that the collective mind of the American university is closed to the principles of the Western tradition, and that it is especially closed to the spiritual heritage of the West, which gave rise to the university in the first place.
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“Even if you don’t buy Bloom’s ultimate message, his examinations of a wide variety of political and philosophical thought are worth the book’s price alone. One chapter is pretty much a cogent summary of Locke’s second treatise on government. His commentary on certain moments in history are also worthy reads.jjhik”
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Carlos (4 out of 5 stars)