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What if Leo Strauss was right?

#1
C C Offline
http://theweek.com/article/index/271006/...-was-right

EXCERPT: [...] In the 12 years since this conversation (or one very much like it) sparked a million ill-informed, fantastical hit pieces on [Leo] Strauss for his insidious influence on the administration of George W. Bush, a series of Strauss' students and admirers have stepped forward to defend his work: Steven Smith, Thomas Pangle, Catherine and Michael Zuckert, Peter Minowitz.

There's much to recommend in each of these books. But for my money, the best by far is Arthur Melzer's just published study, Philosophy Between the Lines: The Lost History of Esoteric Writing. And yes, I would have come to that judgment even if I hadn't studied with the author in graduate school. Melzer has written the most compelling, surprising, and persuasive defense of Strauss's thought that I have ever read. It deserves a wide and appreciative audience. And if it gets one, the consequences could be enormous.

Because if Strauss was right in the way he interpreted the Western philosophical tradition, then much of modern scholarship — and, by extension, our civilization's understanding of its intellectual and political inheritance — will need to be radically revised....
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#2
Yazata Offline
(Nov 5, 2014 03:08 AM)C C Wrote: In the 12 years since this conversation (or one very much like it) sparked a million ill-informed, fantastical hit pieces on [Leo] Strauss for his insidious influence on the administration of George W. Bush

That sounds far-fetched.

Quote:Because if Strauss was right in the way he interpreted the Western philosophical tradition, then much of modern scholarship — and, by extension, our civilization's understanding of its intellectual and political inheritance — will need to be radically revised....

Ever since the baby-boom cohort took over academia, revolutionary iconoclasm has become the new rule of the day. Nobody seems to have any more respect for the scholars and scholarship that came before them. Instead, all previous understanding... seemingly of everything... must be "radically revised".

It gets tiring and even boring after a while.
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