Around the Cragged Hill: A Personal and Political PhilosophyW. W. Norton & Company, 17 maj 1994 - 276 “[Kennan] comes to us…as ambassador of a generation nearly gone and a conservatism so responsible, dutiful and so long extinct it may look revolutionary….As ever, Kennan in the present book has fulfilled his responsibility admirably.” —Chicago Tribune "I have attempted to take the high ground,” writes George F. Kennan in the foreword to this illuminating work, "trying to stick to the broader dimensions of things—the ones that would still be visible and significant in future decades." Against the background of a century of wars, revolution, and uneasy peace, Mr. Kennan advances his thoughts on a broad front: how the individual's quest for power can transform a government into a confusion of ambition, rivalry, and suspicion; how a nation's size can create barriers between the rulers and the ruled; why America must first set its own house in order before it can become a beacon to others. Deeply aware of the pressures under which public officials must act, Mr. Kennan sees a government in Washington that is forced to make decisions on issues of the moment, often without regard for long-term consequences. Neither the legislature, responsive to the interests of a narrow constituency, nor the executive branch, swamped by urgent problems at home and abroad, has the time or inclination to look far beyond the next election. Lost entirely is a vital element in any democracy: deliberation based upon study, review, and judgment. To address problems that defy quick political solutions, Mr. Kennan here boldly lays down a blueprint for a Council of State, a nonpolitical, permanent advisory board that would stand alongside yet apart from government policy makers, with the prestige to be heard "above the cacophony of political ambitions." Rich in historical example, this volume is a brilliant summing up of the experience and thought of the man the Atlantic described in a cover story entitled "The Last Wise Man" as: "diplomat, scholar, writer of rare literary gifts, one of most remarkable Americans of this century." |
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Strona 12
... effort . It implied a belief , or at least a suspicion on their part , that behind all these suggestive specific exam- ples there must have been something to be said by way of generaliza- tion that I had not said but that would be worth ...
... effort . It implied a belief , or at least a suspicion on their part , that behind all these suggestive specific exam- ples there must have been something to be said by way of generaliza- tion that I had not said but that would be worth ...
Strona 13
... effort embodied in what follows will be doubly rewarded . 1. Review by Stuart Hampshire of The Jameses : A Family Narrative , by R. W. B. Lewis , in New York Review of Books , October 10 , 1991 , p . 4 . 13 PART ONE Chapter One MAN ...
... effort embodied in what follows will be doubly rewarded . 1. Review by Stuart Hampshire of The Jameses : A Family Narrative , by R. W. B. Lewis , in New York Review of Books , October 10 , 1991 , p . 4 . 13 PART ONE Chapter One MAN ...
Strona
George F. Kennan. one's own personality. But success in this effort can never be more than partial. The chaotic mix of sensitivities, hopes, expectations, anxieties, uncertainties, temptations to self-admiration, and pangs of contrition ...
George F. Kennan. one's own personality. But success in this effort can never be more than partial. The chaotic mix of sensitivities, hopes, expectations, anxieties, uncertainties, temptations to self-admiration, and pangs of contrition ...
Strona 23
... effort , we can never entirely succeed ; for in this instance the very word " objectivity " is a contradiction of terms . Not that the effort is entirely useless . There are always things to be gained by the mere effort to take at least ...
... effort , we can never entirely succeed ; for in this instance the very word " objectivity " is a contradiction of terms . Not that the effort is entirely useless . There are always things to be gained by the mere effort to take at least ...
Strona 24
... effort to evalu- ate his own identity , to take into account not only his own inner uncertainties but also the evidence afforded to him by the reactions of others to his personality . But in this last effort , he steps out onto a ...
... effort to evalu- ate his own identity , to take into account not only his own inner uncertainties but also the evidence afforded to him by the reactions of others to his personality . But in this last effort , he steps out onto a ...
Spis treści
11 | |
17 | |
FAITH | 37 |
ON GOVERNMENT AND GOVERNMENTS | 53 |
THE NATION | 74 |
IDEOLOGY | 96 |
Foreword for Part Two | 111 |
DIMENSIONS | 142 |
THE ADDICTIONS | 157 |
FOREIGN POLICY NONMILITARY | 180 |
FOREIGN POLICY MILITARY | 212 |
WHAT IS TO BE DONE? | 232 |
Epilogue | 251 |
Index | 261 |
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Around the Cragged Hill: A Personal and Political Philosophy George Frost Kennan Ograniczony podgląd - 1994 |
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