Lee Trepanier is professor of political science at Saginaw Valley State University. Grant Havers is professor of philosophy and political studies at Trinity Western University.
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Chapter 1: James Burnham: From Left to Right Paul Gottfried Chapter 2: Pondering the People: Willmoore Kendall's Intellectual Path From Progressive to Conservative Populism Christopher H. Owen Chapter 3: "Mugged by Reality": The Neoconservative Turn Lee Trepanier Chapter 4: George Grant and Charles Taylor: Canadian Owls Ron Dart Chapter 5: Alasdair MacIntyre's Revolutionary Peripateticism Kelvin Knight Chapter 6: Benedict Ashley's Reappraisal of Marxism Christopher S. Morrissey Chapter 7: Christopher Lasch: A Reconsideration Jeremy Beer Chapter 8: The Failure of Marxism through the Frankfurt School and Jurgen Habermas Pedro Blas Gonzalez Chapter 9: Analytical Marxism and the Meaning of Historicism: Reflections on Kai Nielsen and G. A. Cohen Grant Havers
This is a fine collection of thoughtful, philosophically rigorous, and illuminating studies of major twentieth century leftist thinkers who journeyed rightward. We are offered fascinating and even riveting accounts of radicals coming to grips with and overcoming the dogmas in which they had become immersed. No one, left or right, is immune to the allure of dogma, and this book shows every intellectually serious person the challenge we all face in attaining a genuinely free soul. -- Luigi Bradizza, Salve Regina University Havers and Trepanier have put together an eminently readable and illuminating volume on the philosophical and ideological exodus of leftist thinkers to the right during the 20th century. In addition to the perspective and clarity it provides regarding major 20th century events, it gives us an analytical framework to assess similar shifts in contemporary politics. Serious students of politics, from both the left and right, can learn from the valuable insights in this volume. -- David Whitney, Nicholl State University This volume reveals how, time and again, the experience of the soul has entailed consequential differences between progressive and conservative thinkers. A thorough and persuasive case is made in these pages - when leftist ideologues open themselves to the truth and the good of the order of being, a meaningful transition of political identity from left to right follows. A must-read for serious scholars of ideology and, perhaps especially, for left-leaning individuals who have begun to question their own ideology. -- Scott Robinson, Houston Baptist University Nietzsche in the Will to Power writes: "The charm that works for us, the Venus eye that fascinates even our foes and blinds them, is the magic of the extreme...." The contributors to this volume showcase twentieth-century thinkers who were not so easily charmed by the extreme of the leftist politics they once held. All drew the Aristotelian conclusion that any political form taken to its extreme results in tyranny. Some pragmatically turned to conservatism as the best defense against communism. Others leavened their leftism with traditionalism, religion, nationalism, or communitarianism as a way of moderating their progressivism. Still others suffered religious conversion upon beholding the "Venus eye" which represented for them the metaphysical rebellion grounding political extremism. In a time now characterized by what Pierre Manent calls the "fanaticism of the center," this is volume provides welcome assistance for resisting the charm of the extreme. -- John von Heyking, University of Lethbridge