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The Good Society (Hardcover)
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The Good Society (Hardcover)
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The Good Society is a critical text in the history of liberalism.
Initially a series of articles published in a variety of Lippmann's
favorite magazines, as the whole evolved, it became a frontal
assault against totalitarian tendencies within American society.
Lippmann took to task those who sought to improve the lot of
mankind by undoing the work of their predecessors and by
undermining movements in which men struggle to be free. This book
is a strong indictment of programs of reform that are at odds with
the liberal tradition, and it is critical of those who ask people
to choose between security and liberty. The Good Society falls
naturally into two segments. In the first, Lippmann shows the
errors and common fallacies of faith in government as the solution
to all problems. He says, "from left to right, from communist to
conservative. They all believe the same fundamental doctrine. All
the philosophies go into battle singing the same tune with slightly
different words." In the second part of the book, Lippmann offers
reasons why liberalism lost sight of its purpose and suggests the
first principles on which it can flourish again. Lippmann argues
that liberalism's revival is inevitable because no other system of
government can work, given the kind of economic world mankind
seeks. He did not write The Good Society to please adherents of any
political ideology. Lippmann challenges all philosophies of
government, and yet manages to present a positive program.
Bewildered liberals and conservatives alike will find this work a
successful effort to synthesize a theory of liberalism with the
practice of a strong democracy. Gary Dean Best has provided the
twenty-first century reader a clear-eyed context for interpreting
Lippmann's defense of classical liberalism. The Good Society is the
eleventh in a series of books written by Walter Lippmann reissued
by Transaction with new introductions and in a paperback format. As
with other major figures of the twentieth century such as Thorstein
Veblen, Peter Drucker, Margaret Mead, and Richard Hoggart, these
are classic books with contemporary perspectives.
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