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As recently as fifty years ago, the billowing industrial smokestack
was a proud symbol of progress and power; today it is an image of
unbridled corporate irresponsibility. This change in public
attitudes reflects a shift in social values as rapid and profound
as any in American history. Its effects are so far-reaching that
scarcely anyone imagines there was ever an alternative view of the
relationship between human beings and nature. Yet for all the time
and energy devoted to discussion of environmentalism as a social
and political movement, no one has questioned its existence as a
coherent philosophy or given an account of how it first emerged in
public consciousness. Most people would assume that the
environmental idea, and the powerful political movement it
inspired, must have emerged in response to self evident
environmental problems such as air and water pollution, acid rain,
the human destruction of natural habitats, and the resulting
extinction of endangered species. But Charles T. Rubin argues that
environmental problems are far from being a matter of common sense.
He points out that while such situations almost certainly existed
in the past, they were defined in different terms-implying
different kinds of social and political solutions. Rubin tells the
story of this massive yet strangely unnoticed transformation of
public perception and social morality by focusing on the small
group of influential writers and thinkers-Rachel Carson, Barry
Commoner, Paul Ehrlich, E. F. Schumacher, and others -whose
enormously popular writings gave birth to the environmental
movement as we know it.
Ronald J. Pestritto's and Thomas G. West's earlier volume The
American Founding and the Social Compact addressed the nature of
the thought and philosophy of the men who shaped the American
founding. In this second volume in a trilogy, Pestritto and West
examine the fate of the founders' principles in the nine teeth
century, when these principles faced their first great challenges.
Support of slavery, culminating in secession and civil war, came
from the South; and after the war came positivism, relativism, and
radical egalitarianism, which originated in Europe and infiltrated
American universities, where intellectuals repudiated the founders'
views as historically obsolete and insufficiently concerned with
true human liberation. In ten chapters covering major thinkers in
nineteenth-century American political thought, contributors discuss
the rise and resolution of ideological conflicts in the early
generations of the American republic. In Challenges to the American
Founding Pestritto and West have compiled an invaluable resource
for the roots of the twentieth-century departure in American
politics from the political vision of the American founders.
Ronald J. Pestritto's and Thomas G. West's earlier volume The
American Founding and the Social Compact addressed the nature of
the thought and philosophy of the men who shaped the American
founding. In this second volume in a trilogy, Pestritto and West
examine the fate of the founders' principles in the nine teeth
century, when these principles faced their first great challenges.
Support of slavery, culminating in secession and civil war, came
from the South; and after the war came positivism, relativism, and
radical egalitarianism, which originated in Europe and infiltrated
American universities, where intellectuals repudiated the founders'
views as historically obsolete and insufficiently concerned with
true human liberation. In ten chapters covering major thinkers in
nineteenth-century American political thought, contributors discuss
the rise and resolution of ideological conflicts in the early
generations of the American republic. In Challenges to the American
Founding Pestritto and West have compiled an invaluable resource
for the roots of the twentieth-century departure in American
politics from the political vision of the American founders.
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