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Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006
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Important Concepts: Right and Left Political Spectrum Radical and Reactionary
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Classical Liberalism Montesquieu (1748) John Locke (1670s) Adams Smith (1776) Thomas Jefferson (1776) John Stuart Mill (1859)
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Modern Liberalism John Rawls (1971) John M. Keynes (1919) Isaiah Berlin (1969)
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The French Revolution
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Joseph de Maistre
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Edmund Burke
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A new concern? NO T. Hobbes in Leviathan (1651) Life without government is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short”
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The American Revolution-1776
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"a disposition to preserve, and an ability to improve".
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Loyalists vs. Revolutionaries
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Declaration of Independence “ Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. ”
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Back to Burke’s definition: The American Dilemma… What to preserve?
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Louis Hartz The Liberal Tradition in America
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Two Orientations: Community and Individuals
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Two Orientations: Community Traditionalist-Reformist
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“Organicists” Russell Kirk -more concerned with reversing -negative view of society
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“Reformists” Peter Viereck -concerned with adaptation -positivist of society
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Paleoconservatives 1)Nativists 2)Isolationists 3)Protectionists 4)State Right’s 5)Anti-Welfare State
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Neoconservatives 1)Opportunity 2)Interventionism 3)Free Trade 4)National Government 5)Conservative Welfare State
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The Problem of Organicists Goes back to Burke… What to Preserve? Is conservatism ahistorical? Is there a starting point?
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