“<i>Ronald Reagan: An Intellectual Biography</i> provides unique insight into the mind of one of America’s most enigmatic presidents. This lucid work makes Ronald Reagan more comprehensible. It is an important contribution to Reagan scholarship.”—Peter Schweizer, author of <i>Reagan’s War: The Epic Story of His Forty-Year Struggle and Final Triumph Over Communism</i>
“This book is a commendable effort to take Ronald Reagan eminently seriously for his intellect and his intellectual ideas, which indeed formed the basis of Reagan’s life and his presidency. Byrne accurately deduces the preeminent influence of faith and freedom in the life and mind of Reagan, who called faith and freedom the ‘twin beacons’ that brighten the American sky. America needed the guidance of both, and Reagan himself was guided by both.”—Paul Kengor, PhD, author of <i>God and Ronald Reagan</i> and <i>The Crusader: Ronald Reagan and the Fall of Communism</i>
Byrne’s account of the fortieth president augments previous work on Reagan with a new model for understanding him. Byrne shows how Reagan took conservatism and the Republican Party in a new direction, departing from the traditional conservatism of Edmund Burke and Russell Kirk. His desire to spread a “Kingdom of Freedom” both at home and abroad changed America’s political landscape forever and inspired a new conservatism that persists to this day.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Religious Roots
2. From Liberal to Conservative
3. Fostering Freedom at Home
4. Understanding Reagan
5. A Moral View of the Cold War
6. Promoting Freedom Abroad
7. Did Reagan’s Ideas Matter?
8. The Reagan Intellectual Legacy
Conclusion
Appendix: “A Time for Choosing”
Notes
Bibliography
Index