| The Making of The Conservative Mind |
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i | |
| Foreword to the Seventh Revised Editon |
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xiii | |
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The Idea of Conservativism |
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3 | (9) |
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Burke and the Politics of Prescription |
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12 | (59) |
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12 | (11) |
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23 | (5) |
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Providence and veneration |
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28 | (9) |
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Prejudice and prescription |
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37 | (10) |
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The rights of civil social man |
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47 | (11) |
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58 | (6) |
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64 | (7) |
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John Adams and Liberty under Law |
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71 | (43) |
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Federalists and Republicans |
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71 | (4) |
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75 | (5) |
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Fisher Ames' vaticinations |
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80 | (6) |
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John Adams as psychologist |
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86 | (7) |
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The aristocracy of nature |
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93 | (5) |
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98 | (12) |
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Marshall and the metamorphosis of federalism |
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110 | (4) |
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Romantics and Utilitarians |
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114 | (36) |
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Benthamism and Walter Scott |
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114 | (10) |
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Canning and enlightened conservatism |
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124 | (9) |
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Coleridge and conservative ideas |
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133 | (13) |
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The triumph of abstraction |
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146 | (4) |
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Southern Conservatism: Randolph and Calhoun |
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150 | (35) |
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150 | (5) |
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Randolph on the peril of positive legislation |
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155 | (13) |
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The rights of minorities: Calhoun |
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168 | (13) |
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181 | (4) |
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Liberal Conservatives: Macaulay, Cooper, Tocqueville |
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185 | (40) |
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Burke's influence upon liberalism |
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185 | (3) |
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188 | (9) |
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Fenimore Cooper and a gentleman's America |
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197 | (7) |
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Tocqueville on democratic despotism |
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204 | (12) |
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216 | (9) |
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Transitional Conservatism: New England Sketches |
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225 | (35) |
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Industrialism as a leveller |
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225 | (6) |
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John Quincy Adams and progress: his aspirations and his failure |
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231 | (9) |
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The illusions of transcendentalism |
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240 | (5) |
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Brownson on the conservative power of Catholicism |
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245 | (5) |
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Nathaniel Hawthorne: society and sin |
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250 | (10) |
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Conservatism with Imagination: Disraeli and Newman |
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260 | (38) |
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Marx's materialism; and the fruits of liberalism |
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260 | (6) |
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Disraeli and Tory loyalties |
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266 | (13) |
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Newman: the sources of knowledge and the idea of education |
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279 | (15) |
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The age of discussion: Bagehot |
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294 | (4) |
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Legal and Historical Conservatism: a Time of Foreboding |
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298 | (39) |
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Liberalism and collectivism: John Stuart Mill, Comte, and positivism |
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298 | (6) |
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Stephen on the ends of life and politics |
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304 | (11) |
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Maine: status and contract |
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315 | (12) |
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Lecky: illiberal democracy |
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327 | (10) |
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Conservatism Frustrated: America, 1865-1918 |
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337 | (38) |
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337 | (4) |
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James Russell Lowell's perplexities |
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341 | (7) |
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Godkin on democratic opinion |
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348 | (8) |
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Henry Adams on the degradation of the democratic dogma |
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356 | (10) |
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Brooks Adams and a world of terrible energies |
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366 | (9) |
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English Conservatism Adrift: the Twentieth Century |
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375 | (40) |
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The end of aristocratic politics: 1906 |
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375 | (5) |
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George Gissing and the Nether World |
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380 | (7) |
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Arthur Balfour: his spiritual conservatism; and the tide of socialism |
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387 | (9) |
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The books of W. H. Mallock: a conservative synthesis |
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396 | (14) |
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A dreary conservatism between wars |
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410 | (5) |
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Critical Conservatism: Babbitt, More, Santayana |
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415 | (42) |
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Pragmatism: the fumbling of America |
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415 | (4) |
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Irving Babbitt's humanism: the higher will in a democracy |
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419 | (13) |
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Paul Elmer More on justice and faith |
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432 | (11) |
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George Santayana buries liberalism |
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443 | (10) |
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America in search of ideas |
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453 | (4) |
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457 | (46) |
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457 | (9) |
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466 | (9) |
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Scholar confronts intellectual |
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475 | (16) |
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491 | (12) |
| Notes |
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503 | (12) |
| Bibliography |
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515 | (10) |
| Index |
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525 | |