1st Edition

Thinking Politically Liberalism in the Age of Ideology

By Raymond Aron Copyright 1997
    347 Pages
    by Routledge

    347 Pages
    by Routledge

    Thinking Politically brings together a series of remarkable interviews with Raymond Aron that form a political history of our time. Ranging over an entire lifetime, from his youthful experience with the rise of Nazi totalitarianism in Berlin to the denouement of the cold war, Aron meditates on the threats to liberty and reason in the bloody twentieth century. Originally published as The Commuted Observer, this volume provides one of the fullest accounts available of the dramatic events of the "short century," which began with the pistol shot in Sarajevo in 1914 and ended with the collapse of the Ideological monsters whose deadly nature Aron had ruthlessly exposed for a half-century.

    In addition to the interviews published in the original edition. Thinking Politically incorporates three interviews never before published in book form. This supplemental material clarifies Aron's role as a voice of prudential reason in an unreasonable age and allows unparalleled access to the principal influences on Aron's thought. The volume concludes with "Democratic States and Totalitarian States," an address by Aron to the French Philosophical Society as well as the accompanying debate with Jacques Maritaln, Victor Basch, and other intellectuals. Thinking Politically serves as an ideal gateway into Aron's reflections, and offers a superb single-volume introduction to the major events and conflicts of the twentieth century. It will be a welcome addition to the libraries of political theorists, historians, sociologists, philosophers, and citizens wishing to understand the political and intellectual currents of the age.

    Part I: The Committed Observer. Introduction, Section One: France in the Tempest, A Young Intellectual of the 1930s, The Dark Years, 1940-1945, The Disillusionments of Liberation, Section Two: Democracy and Totalitarianism, The Great Schism, 1947-1956, Decolonization, Peace and War Among Nations, Section Three: Liberty and Reason, The Left, Steadfast and Changing, The Clash of Empires, The Committed Observer, Conclusion, Identification of Persons Named in Part I, Notes to Part I, Part II: Encounters with Raymond Aron: 1970-1976, The Disillusions of Modernity, On Loathing Tyranny, Can Democracy Survive?, Part III: An Afterword, Democratic States and Totalitarian States: An Address to the French Philosophical Society, June 17,1939

    Biography

    Raymond Aron was the foremost political and social theorist in post-World War II France. He authored more than forty books, including Politics and History and In Defense of Decadent Europe, also available from Transaction. Daniel J. Mahoney is associate professor of politics at Assumption College. He is the author of the The Liberal Political Science of Raymond Aron and De Gaulle: Statesmanship, Grandeur, and Modern Democracy. Brian C. Anderson is research associate in social and political studies at the American Enterprise Institute and the literary editor of Crisis. His essays and reviews have appeared in First Things, Interpretation, The Review of Politics, The Salisbury Review, and many other journals.