American Inquisitors / Edition 1

American Inquisitors / Edition 1

by Walter Lippmann
ISBN-10:
1560006358
ISBN-13:
9781560006350
Pub. Date:
01/30/1993
Publisher:
Transaction Publishers
ISBN-10:
1560006358
ISBN-13:
9781560006350
Pub. Date:
01/30/1993
Publisher:
Transaction Publishers
American Inquisitors / Edition 1

American Inquisitors / Edition 1

by Walter Lippmann
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Overview

American Inquisitors is one of the small gems among Walter Lippmann's larger books. Written in response to the trials of John Scopes and William McAndrew in 1925 and 1927, this volume contains a succinct analysis of a basic problem of democracy: the conflict between intellectual freedom and majority rule. In both cases, the state, acting in the name of popular sovereignty, sought to suppress teaching that was contrary to the tenets of religious fundamentalism and patriotic tradition. In distilling the arguments surrounding both trials, Lippmann sounds a warning against the tyranny of the majority and challenges people to rethink their theories of liberty and democracy.American Inquisitors consists of five related dialogues, each exploring a different dilemma at the heart of democratic political theory. The first two establish the principles of majority rule and freedom of the mind in the persons of William Jennings Bryan and Thomas Jefferson, with Socrates urging a reexamination of all principles..These dialogues debate the will and the rational capacity of the people to rule and demonstrate the relative nature of freedom in democratic society.The third and fourth dialogues set a fundamentalist against a modernist and an Americanist against a scholar. Lippmann resists easy stereotyping and puts challenging insights and plausible arguments into the mouths of all the parties. These dialogues ask whether commitment to community comes before intellectual inquiry, 'or whether the search for truth precedes identity. The final dialogue, between Socrates and a conscientious teacher, attempts to define the mission of teaching and determine when and how to face the consequences of truth. Lippmann concludes that the program of liberty is to deprive the sovereign of absolute and arbitrary rule. Taken as a whole, the dialogues constitute an essential consistency within Lippmann's political thought, and delineate a recurring problem hi American politcal culture. American Inquisitors will be of special interest to political scientists, historians, sociologists, and American studies specialists.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781560006350
Publisher: Transaction Publishers
Publication date: 01/30/1993
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 156
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Walter Lippmann (1889-1974) was the author of many books on political thought and was widely considered America’s most distinguished syndicated columnist. In addition to being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, he won two Pulitzer Prizes for his newspaper column “Today and Tomorrow,” which appeared in the New YorkHerald Tribune. Ron Christenson is professor of political science at Gustavus Adolphus College. He is the author of Political Trials: Gordian Knots in the Law and editor of Political Trials in History, both available from Transaction.

Table of Contents

1: New Phases of an Ancient Conflict; 2: Fundamentalism; III: The Teacher and the Rule of Majorities; IV: Coda
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