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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
We who are a part of the civilization that has developed in Europe since the eleventh century and in America since the sixteenth, are living in a world many times richer in material comforts than any before in history. We are living in a world where people are more confused about the nature of the moral and the intellectual virtues than they have been since the Dark Ages, possibly since the last century of the Roman Empire. Few are capable of recognizing those who practice these virtues. It is fashionable to deny that there can be any firm criteria for judging between good and bad private conduct, between good and bad philosophy or art, teaching or statesmanship.
1 The Architecture of Humanism, London, 1914, p. viiiGoogle Scholar.
2 Hutchins, R. M., The Higher Learning in America, New Haven, 1936; No Friendly Voice, Chicago, 1936Google Scholar.