Conservatism: Dream and RealityTransaction Publishers - 118 páginas |
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... important as " com- munity . " He uses the word concretely . Communities are not main- tained by sentiment , at least not alone . Rather , communities arise to address basic human needs and to solve problems . As Nisbet says , quoting ...
... important as " com- munity . " He uses the word concretely . Communities are not main- tained by sentiment , at least not alone . Rather , communities arise to address basic human needs and to solve problems . As Nisbet says , quoting ...
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... important social pluralists . Burke and Tocqueville are also the two thinkers who most influenced Nisbet , as is amply clear in the pages that follow . Nisbet treated Hobbes and Rousseau as the two most seminal political monists ; he ...
... important social pluralists . Burke and Tocqueville are also the two thinkers who most influenced Nisbet , as is amply clear in the pages that follow . Nisbet treated Hobbes and Rousseau as the two most seminal political monists ; he ...
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... important respects . " 21 As noted above , Nisbet's views of classical liberalism had under- gone a dramatic change by 1986. In Conservatism : Dream and Re- ality , Nisbet records Burke as asserting that government should limit its ...
... important respects . " 21 As noted above , Nisbet's views of classical liberalism had under- gone a dramatic change by 1986. In Conservatism : Dream and Re- ality , Nisbet records Burke as asserting that government should limit its ...
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... important as the public realm : it is the realm wherein selfless acts are nurtured , wherein we are regulated by the approbation and disap- probation of our intimates , and wherein we undertake positive acts aimed at common ends ...
... important as the public realm : it is the realm wherein selfless acts are nurtured , wherein we are regulated by the approbation and disap- probation of our intimates , and wherein we undertake positive acts aimed at common ends ...
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Contenido
1 | |
Preface | 15 |
Dogmatics of Conservatism | 37 |
Some Consequences of Conservatism | 85 |
The Prospects of Conservatism | 103 |
Bibliography | 119 |
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Términos y frases comunes
Adam Smith American aristocracy authority believed Bentham Bonald Brunetiere Burke wrote Burke's Burkean Christian church Churchill civil classical liberalism Coleridge conservatism conservative thought considerable number constitution corporate criticism culture declared democracy democratic Disraeli Dream and Reality economic Edmund Burke England English equality essentially established Europe European feudal forces France freedom French Revolution German groups Hegel human idea of progress ideology individual institutions intellectual Irving Babbitt Irving Kristol Jacobins kind liberty Maistre mass medieval ment Michael Oakeshott Middle Ages mind modern moral natural law natural rights Neo-conservative Newman nineteenth century Nisbet says Oakeshott Otto von Gierke past Paul Elmer philosophy pluralists political prejudice principles Quest for Community radical rationalist Reagan realm reform religion religious revolutionary Robert Nisbet role Rousseau Russell Kirk social pluralism socialist society T. S. Eliot thing tion tism tive Tory tradition traditionalists utilitarianism vative virtue welfare Western words