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The Dream of Scientific Liberalism: The New Republic and American Progressive Thought, 1914–1920
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
Extract
Over the years, historians have engaged in various disputes concerning the origins, nature, and results of the progressive movement that dominated the political imagination of Americans during the first two decades of the twentieth century. No one set of categories has dominated those disputes, but much of the controversy has focused on a fundamental tension in progressive thought: the conflict between a liberalism centered in humanitarian and moral passion and one based in an ethos of scientific analysis.
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- Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1980
References
1 Since this is not an essay in historiography, no effort is made here to cite the extensive and diverse literature on the subject, except where directly applicable.
2 Although for reasons of convenience and coherence the essay focuses on the New Republic, it assumes that the views found there represent accurately the ideas of a substantial number of progressive thinkers. Students of the period are all familiar with the journal's influence, part of which was reflected in the writers it attracted: a list of the New Republic's contributors for the period forms a virtual roster of the Anglo-American political-intellectual establishment.
No small part of the journal's influence came from its excellence. George F. Kennan, the scholar and diplomat, has summarized well the editors' achievement: “In point of sheer literary excellence alone, these men had no superiors among their American contemporaries. In addition, they were able to muster among them a catholicity of interest, a depth of perception, a seriousness of concept, a tolerance, and a good taste that placed their collective effort in the foremost ranks of English-language journalism of all time” (“Walter Lippmann, the New Republic, and the Russian Revolution,” in Walter Lippmann and His Times, eds. Childs, and Reston, [New York, 1959]).Google Scholar
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