Other God that Failed

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A01=Jerry Z. Muller
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Anachronism
Anathema
Anti-fascism
Anti-intellectualism
Author_Jerry Z. Muller
Bankruptcy
Category=JH
Civil disorder
Closed circle
Closed community
Contempt
Contradiction
Corporatism
Corruption
Demagogue
Denazification
Dichotomy
Dictatorship
Disadvantage
Disparagement
Distrust
Duress
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Existential crisis
Failed state
Fraud
Gauleiter
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Good and evil
Gottfried Benn
Guenter Lewy
Half-mast
Hans Freyer
Homophobia
Hypocrisy
Imposition
Institution
Irrationality
Marx's theory of alienation
Negative liberty
Neglect
Obligation
One-Dimensional Man
Pathos
Perversion
Pessimism
Prejudice
Primitive communism
Protest
Pseudonym
Radicalization
Scientific racism
Self-esteem
Self-Reliance
Shame
Short title
Shortage
Skepticism
Social rejection
Sociology
Sympathy
Symptom
The Decline of the West
The God that Failed
The Other Hand
The Philosopher
Uncertainty
Unintended consequences
Unspoken rule
Vagueness
Vassal state
Wissenschaft

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691008233
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Apr 1988
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Why did some of the "best and brightest" of Weimar intellectuals advocate totalitarian solutions to the problems of liberal democratic, capitalist society? How did their "radical conservatism" contribute to the rise of National Socialism? What roles did they play in the Third Reich? How did their experience of totalitarianism lead them to recast their social and political thought? This biography of Hans Freyer, a prominent German sociologist and political ideologist, is a case study of intellectuals and a "god that failed"--not on the political left, but on the right, where its significance has been overlooked. The author explores the interaction of political ideology and academic social science in democratic and totalitarian regimes, the transformation of German conservatism by the experience of National Socialism, and the ways in which tension between former collaborators and former opponents of National Socialism continued to mold West German intellectual life in the postwar decades.