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In 1962, Walker Percy (1916--1990) made a dramatic entrance onto
the American literary scene when he won the National Book Award for
fiction with his first novel, The Moviegoer. A physician,
philosopher, and devout Catholic, Percy dedicated his life to
understanding the mixed and somewhat contradictory foundations of
American life as a situation faced by the wandering and won-dering
human soul. His controversial works combined existential
questioning, scientific investigation, the insight of the southern
stoic, and authentic religious faith to produce a singular view of
humanity's place in the cosmos that ranks among the best American
political thinking.
An authoritative guide to the political thought of this
celebrated yet complex American author, A Political Companion to
Walker Percy includes seminal essays by Ralph C. Wood, Richard
Reinsch II, and James V. Schall, S.J., as well as new analyses of
Percy's view of Thomistic realism and his reaction to the American
pursuit of happiness. Editors Peter Augustine Lawler and Brian A.
Smith have assembled scholars of diverse perspectives who provide a
necessary lens for interpreting Percy's works. This comprehensive
introduction to Percy's "American Thomism" is an indispensable
resource for students of American literature, culture, and
politics.
An apparatus to generate continuous wave (CW) lasing at 2.714 mm by
Br(2P1/2) atoms produced from photodissociation of IBr was
designed, constructed and tested. A frequency doubled Nd: YAG laser
firing 8 ns, 850 mJ pulses at 532 nm was used to photodissociate
static IBr vapor inside a flow nozzle. The CaF2 windows on either
side of the nozzle proved to have a damage threshold below the
threshold for lasing. Pulsed lasing in static mode was not
observed. Therefore, CW lasing in flow mode, using an Ar+ laser at
488 nm, could not be investigated
Walker Percy is one of America's great novelists, and he ought to
be known as a political thinker as well. In Walker Percy and the
Politics of the Wayfarer, Brian A. Smith makes the case that we
should understand Percy's novels and essays together as a guide to
living in a complex world. Percy cultivated a philosophical and
literary approach that revealed the fault lines in the modern mind.
He portrayed man as a wayfarer: peristantly unsatisfied and
wandering in search of a perfectly complete solution to life's
dilemmas. His writing captures the restlessness of the human heart
and allows us to comprehend our temptation to escape our sense of
alienation and longing. Drawing ideas from philosophy, psychology,
linguistics, and literature, Percy's multidimensional account of
American political life shows the ways that today's approaches to
life often fall short and leave us more unsatisfied with ourselves
and others than ever. Percy hoped we would evade the temptations to
escape the life of the wayfarer and accept our misplaced longings,
alienation, depression, and anxiety as part of the human condition.
Failing to do this might lead us to accept ever more extreme
political and social ideas as the basis for life. The promise of
embracing Percy's political teaching is that we might then be able
to accept ourselves as we really are in order to join with others
in authentic community.
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