Anderson makes a good case for Aron's subtlety and intelligence. . . and deserves high praise for explicating and elucidating [Aron's] message with impressive analysis and textual fidelity.
- Sanford Lakoff, The Review of Politics, Fall 1998
Writing with great clarity of style from a stance of interpretive charity, Anderson helps us to sort out Aron's enormous oeuvre. There is much more to recommend in this densely packed, lucid volume. Anderson's effort to bring the attention of our political theorists back to Aron is worthy of our thanks.
- Jean Bethke Elshtain, The Laura Spelman Rockeller Professor of Social and Political Ethics, University of Chicago; author of Just War Against Terror, First Things, Nov. 98
A compelling examination of Aron's contributions to political theory and practice.
Microsoft Network's Reading Forum, August 1998
Brian Anderson's insightful book on Raymond Aron deserves a wide audience. According to Anderson, modern liberal theory lacks an understanding of politics, but a corrective is to be found in Aron's 'conservative liberalism.' An exceptional analysis, and much needed.
- Adam Wolfson, Executive Editor, The Public Interest,
One of the great contributions of Brian Anderson's book is to highlight the role of political reason—related to Aristotle's practical wisdom—in the work of Aron. A splendid book, of elegance and distinction.
- Michael Novak, former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights Commission, 1994 Templeton laureate,
Brian Anderson's elegant book wonderfully captures Aron's recovery of the political as an independent realm of thought and action. One of its great strengths is the way it places Aron's work in fruitful dialogue with other important twentieth-century political thinkers such as Isaiah Berlin, F. A. Hayek, John Rawls, and Leo Strauss. Anderson shows that if political theorists wish to take politics seriously, they must fully confront the work of Aron.
- Daniel J. Mahoney, Assumption College,
In his excellent analysis of Aron's many writings, Anderson (American Enterprise Institute) succeeds in showing their deep, ever reflective political character and in explaining how they qualify as conservatively liberal. The book should be required reading for all interested in modern political and social thought.
- C.E. Butterworth, University of Maryland College Park Choic, CHOICE, October 98
As an account of the political thought of Raymond Aron, this study has much to recommend it . . . [Anderson's] aims are acheived with elegance and insight.
- Jeremy Jennings, University of Birmingham, Political Studies Review, Sept. '99; Vol. 47 No. 4
Brian C. Anderson attempts to rescue Aron fron relative obscurity by suggesting that what he has to say about modern politics is grounded in a sophisticated understanding of prctical reason. One of the prominent themes of the book is that modern liberal theories have become divorced from the practical concerns and realities of politics through abstract theorizing, which fails to engage with practical politics and lived concerns.
Anderson has covered all of these aspects of Aron's work with admirable clarity and has convincingly established the case for understanding Aron's overall intelligibility in terms of political reason. A particular strength of the book is the treatment of Aron's critique of ideology in which the conecpt of a secular religion provides the driving force. The book is to be commended both for the author's lucidity and the strength of the case he makes for taking Aron much more seriously as a social and political analyst.
- David Boucher, Professor of Political Philosophy and International Relations, Cardiff University, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Vol.36(1)
[an] engaging and well-structured book . . .
- Cécile Laborde, Nuffield Chair in Political Theory, University of Oxford, History of Political Thought
As we approach the twenty-first century, Rowman & Littlefield is proud to announce a new series that will provide a comprehensive and insightful overview of the great political thinkers of the twentieth century. Twentieth Century Political Thinkers includes original introductions to and interpretations of the most influential political thinkers from within and beyond political science whose social, religious, literary, economic, and political perspectives have deeply influenced the field of political theory. The series includes thinkers who represent the diverse interests of political theorists from Leo Strauss to Herbert Marcuse. It balances fresh, thoughtful perspectives on leading thinkers with works on those not yet adequately represented in the canon. Books in the series appeal to political scientists, philosophers, historians, literary theorists, and theologians, and are valuable to advanced undergraduate as well as to graduate students and specialists in the field. While each volume in the series will be significant in its own right, as a collection Twentieth Century Political Thinkers stands as a monument to the vitality of contemporary political thought.
Series Editors: Kenneth L. Deutsch and Jean Bethke Elshtain