Decline of the Intellectual

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A01=Thomas Molnar
academic elitism
Author_Thomas Molnar
campus radicalism
Category=JBCC9
Category=JBSA
Credo
Declaration Of Independence
Destiny
Diderot
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
European Intellectual
Fellowship
Follow
Frictions
Held
higher education reform
ideological critique
Inclined
intellectual class decline in academia
Kindred
Mankind
Marxist theory analysis
Orbit
Planetary Coexistence
Plaything
Political Parties
Postwar
Smooth
social
Social Engineer
Social Engineering
Superimposed
Thomas Aquinas
Thomas Molnar
Tillich
United States
university culture transformation
Unlimited

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560007432
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 1994
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In perhaps his most famous book, The Decline of the Intellectual, Thomas Molnar launches into a fundamental critique of the intellectual class. He sees it as a group that had lost its way, collapsing a sense of vision into political activism, social engineering, and culture manipulation, and abandoning the writing, philosophizing, and scholarship that had occupied their predecessors. Universities began to produce factory-like, faceless citizens, as the job market became the arbiter of education and culture. Today's professors are recruited from this group of job seekers, and hence, have a shared indifference toward learning.

Molnar likens present-day intellectuals to the earlier Marxists who elaborated their Utopian model in the Communist party. The campus intellectuals' objective is to transform the university into a replica and a laboratory of the ideal society. Colleges and universities thus become sources of propaganda of various political, financial, cultural, and ideological trends, not only among students, but professors as well. The thirty years separating editions have done nothing to weaken such a critical appraisal.

In his new introduction, Molnar writes that the decline of intellectuals has extended outside of the campus to the arts, the public discourse, and the robotization caused by technology. On the initial publication of this work, Frank S. Meyer wrote in Modern Age, "Thomas Molnar's book is not only true; it is intellectually exciting and it will remain a necessary handbook for anyone interested in the decisive problem of the 20th century." The Decline of the Intellectual is essential reading for sociologists, political scientists, educators, and university officials. It is the basis of present-day critiques of the academic world.

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