American Mind
American Mind
American Mind
Part I
Professor Allen C. Guelzo
Dr. Allen C. Guelzo is the Henry R. Luce Professor of the Civil War Era and Director of Civil War Era Studies at
Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. He is also the Associate Director of the Civil War Institute at
Gettysburg College. He was born in Yokohama, Japan, but grew up in Philadelphia. He holds an M.A. and Ph.D. in
history from the University of Pennsylvania, where he wrote his dissertation under the direction of Bruce Kuklick,
Alan C. Kors, and Richard S. Dunn. Dr. Guelzo taught at Drexel University and, for 13 years, at Eastern University
in St. Davids, Pennsylvania. At Eastern, he was the Grace Ferguson Kea Professor of American History, and from
1998 to 2004, he was the founding dean of the Templeton Honors College at Eastern.
Dr. Guelzo is the author of numerous books on American intellectual history and on Abraham Lincoln and the Civil
War era, beginning with his first work, Edwards on the Will: A Century of American Theological Debate, 1750
1850 (Wesleyan University Press, 1989). His second book, For the Union of Evangelical Christendom: The Irony of
the Reformed Episcopalians, 18731930 (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994), won the Outler Prize for
Ecumenical Church History of the American Society of Church History. He wrote The Crisis of the American
Republic: A History of the Civil War and Reconstruction for the St. Martins Press American History series in 1995
and followed that with an edition of Josiah G. Hollands Life of Abraham Lincoln (1866) in 1998 for the Bison
Books series of classic Lincoln biography reprints of the University of Nebraska Press. Dr. Guelzos book
Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President (Wm. Eerdmans, 1999) won both the Lincoln Prize and the Abraham
Lincoln Institute Prize in 2000. In 2003, his article, Defending Emancipation: Abraham Lincoln and the Conkling
Letter, August, 1863, won Civil War Historys John T. Hubbell Prize for the best article of that year. Dr. Guelzos
most recent work, Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation: The End of Slavery in America (Simon & Schuster,
2004), also won the Lincoln Institute Prize and the Lincoln Prize for 2005, making him the first double Lincoln
Laureate in the history of both prizes. He is now at work on a new book on the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858,
also for Simon & Schuster.
Dr. Guelzo has written for The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, First Things, the
Claremont Review of Books, and Books and Culture and has been featured on NPRs Weekend Edition Sunday
and Brian Lambs Booknotes. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Abraham Lincoln Association, the
Abraham Lincoln Institute, and the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church; a member of the advisory councils
of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission and the McNeil Center for Early American Studies (at the
University of Pennsylvania); and a member of the American Historical Association, the Organization of American
Historians, the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic, the Society of Civil War Historians, and the
Union League of Philadelphia. Dr. Guelzo has been a fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies (1991
1992), the McNeil Center for Early American Studies (19921993), the Charles Warren Center for American
Studies at Harvard University (19941995), and the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at
Princeton University (20022003). Professor Guelzos other Teaching Company courses include Mr. Lincoln: The
Life of Abraham Lincoln and History of the United States, 2nd Edition, which he team-taught with Patrick Allitt and
Gary W. Gallagher.
Dr. Guelzo lives in Paoli and Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, with his wife, Debra.
Professor Biography............................................................................................i
Course Scope.......................................................................................................1
Lecture One The Intellectual Geography of America ....................3
Lecture Two The Technology of Puritan Thinking ........................5
Lecture Three The Enlightenment in America..................................7
Lecture Four Jonathan Edwards and the Great Awakening ............9
Lecture Five The Colonial Colleges .............................................11
Lecture Six Republican Fundamentals........................................12
Lecture Seven Natures God and the American Revolution............14
Lecture Eight Deism, Science, and Revolution ..............................15
Lecture Nine Hamilton and His Money.........................................17
Lecture Ten Jefferson and His Debts...........................................19
Lecture Eleven The EdwardseansFrom Hopkins to Finney..........21
Lecture Twelve The Moral Philosophers...........................................23
Timeline .............................................................................................................25
Glossary.............................................................................................................28
Biographical Notes............................................................................................31
Bibliography......................................................................................................33
Scope:
This Teaching Company lecture series offers a broad survey of American intellectual history. It is a history of the
ideas, the thinkers, and the institutions that have mattered most to Americans as a people. The 36 lectures in this
series are built around six basic themes in American thinking:
1. The fundamental struggle for importance between intellect and willin other words, whether it is more
important for us to think or to act.
2. The persistence of religious ideas as a living part of American intellectual life.
3. The formation of two souls in the American consciousness, one the product of Puritan religion and the
other the product of Americas embrace of the Enlightenment.
4. The struggle between liberty and power in a democratic society, as seen in the liberal capitalism of
Alexander Hamilton and Abraham Lincoln, and the fierce suspicion of commercial societies seen in
Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson.
5. The dramatic shift in categories of American thinking that occurred in the postCivil War decades, which
turned Americans away from traditional philosophical and social thinking and toward pragmatism and
secularism.
6. The dilemmas posed by the American ascent to world power through two world wars and the
responsibilities that have come with it.
Well begin in Lecture One by confronting a fundamental problem that occurs whenever we try to speak of an
American mind. Americans like to think of themselves as a practical, hands-on, results-oriented kind of people.
How can we be such a hard-headed nation and still really have an intellectual history? Part of the answer to that
question begins with Lecture Two, where we examine the Puritans, who combined a strong scholastic intellectual
inheritance with a deep and uneasy piety that pitted will and intellect against each other in ways that continue to
echo in our ears. We move almost at once in Lecture Three to what is supposed to be the antithesis of Puritan piety,
and that is the American Enlightenmentonly to find that the Enlightenment was not without its own pious unease.
In fact, well find in Lecture Four that one of the brightest gems in the American Enlightenment was also one of its
most determined Puritans, Jonathan Edwards. Lecture Five will, in the same way, use the premier intellectual
institutions of early Americaits collegesto illustrate how the Enlightenment and piety struggled unevenly for
advantage and sometimes for common ground.
Lectures Six through Eight explore the ways in which Enlightenment Americans turned their attention from the
loftier realms of God and truth to politics and why the English Whig republicans exerted so strong a hold on the
American revolutionaries. Two of those revolutionaries, Hamilton and Jefferson, joined to found a new republican
government but soon discovered (as well see in Lectures Nine and Ten) that there could be two powerfully
contradictory ways of thinking about a republic, depending on whether one drank from the fountain of classical
republicanism or liberal republicanism. There might even be a third way, as Lectures Eleven and Twelve will show,
if one allows religion to have its say, as indeed it did, in the very different forms of Edwardsean revivalism and
collegiate moral philosophy.
Lectures Thirteen through Seventeen explore the ways in which these notions of being a republic were tried in the
fire of ideological controversyJacksonians and Whigs, Romantics and Rationalists, slaveholders and
abolitionistsall of which culminated in the explosive conflict of the American Civil War. Lecture Eighteen,
focusing on Abraham Lincoln, shows us how very much the Civil War was a struggle of ideas as well as armies. In
fact, it shows how very much a man of ideas could live within the skin of a professional politician.
The war assured victory to one side in the great struggle of ideas and culture. But it was an enormously costly
struggle, and it left the victors unable to deal with a fresh set of challengesdisillusion with the shallowness of
victory (Lecture Nineteen); the impact of Charles Darwin, which amounted to a sort of second Enlightenment
(Lecture Twenty); and the scramble of American religion to define a new place for itself in industrial America
(Lecture Twenty-One). A handful of thinkerswith Josiah Royce as the principal exampletried to find a new
ground for stability and absolute truths, but Royce stood little chance against the cheerful philosophical pragmatism
Scope: Before we can study the American mind, we have to be sure that there is one. This claim has been
doubted by many interpreters who see Americans as activistsas doers rather than thinkerssomething
that is reinforced by the way American intellectual history has been taught. The Great Convention of
American intellectual history traces a course from the Puritans to Franklin to Emerson to James. But this
approach is suspect because it ignores large stretches of intellectual territory, which we will make the real
object of our course.
Outline
I. Many people doubt that there is an American mind worth studying.
A. The great defining characteristic of Americans is precisely that we are doers, not thinkers.
1. We respect knowledge and education but only to solve problems.
2. We are comparatively new among the nations of the Earth.
3. We fear what ideas can do to people if they become too preoccupied with them.
B. Sometimes this denial of the existence of an American mind becomes congratulatory.
1. Emerson believed that character is higher than intellect.
2. The historian Daniel Boorstin described early Americans as a people who focused on the immediate.
C. Other observers were not quite so confident that this was a good thing.
1. Tocqueville thought democracy had an ill effect on the life of the mind.
2. James Fenimore Cooper complained about the popular press.
3. Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story blamed light reading for crowding out real literature.
4. Psychologist G. Stanley Hall indicted church control over college curriculums.
5. Philosopher George Santayana believed serious intellectual life took a back-row seat to industrial
energy.
6. Journalist and critic Henry L. Mencken dismissed the American cultural landscape as a Sahara of the
Bozarts.
7. American historians look for explanations in purely material causes.
II. When someone does venture to teach a course on American intellectual history, the usual course of study
follows the Great Convention.
A. It begins with the Puritans.
1. It suggests that the work of building a colony would keep them too busy for thinking.
2. It dismisses Puritan theology as medieval scholasticism.
B. It moves to Jonathan Edwards.
1. It defines Edwards as a hell-fire preacher during the Great Awakening.
2. Edwardss life is supposed to show how badly America treats its thinkers.
C. It moves to Benjamin Franklin.
1. It rhapsodizes on Franklins Autobiography.
2. Franklin introduces us to the model American, practical and commonsensical.
D. It pays homage to William James, John Dewey, and the triumph of pragmatism
1. It lauds pragmatism because it is a philosophy that sees no intrinsic use for ideas.
2. It shows how all American intellectual roads lead to pragmatism.
III. There are a number of difficulties with this Great Convention.
A. It jumbles together a great many un-alikes.
1. There are very few systematic thinkers.
2. These writers represent different and incompatible genres.
B. Most of the Great Conventions subjects are suspiciously concentrated around Boston.
1. That is a product of the dominance of Harvard-trained academics in the history of ideas.
Essential Reading:
W. McClay, Do Ideas Matter in America? The Wilson Quarterly (Summer 2003).
Supplementary Reading:
M. Zuckerman, Almost Chosen People, chapter 1.
Questions to Consider:
1. What are the chief weaknesses of the Great Convention of the history of American ideas?
2. Is Edwards more important than Franklin?
Scope: The Puritans brought with them, as colonizers, a vibrant intellectual life, born partly of the Calvinist
Reformation and partly of medieval scholasticism. But they also brought with them unresolved problems
over the intellect and the will and struggled to adapt themselves to the spread of a new methodology for
learning based on doubt and experiment.
Outline
I. The Puritans who arrived in New England in 1630 were the product of the European Reformation.
A. The issue triggering the Reformation was: By what means is man made right with God?
1. This issue implicated a host of others.
2. John Calvin began to remodel other features of traditional Catholic belief.
B. A uniquely Calvinistic theology eventually emerged, based on five fundamental points and known by the
acronym TULIP:
1. Total depravity
2. Unconditional election
3. Limited atonement
4. Irresistible grace
5. Perseverance of the saints
C. In England, the Reformation was introduced by King Henry VIII.
1. Henry VIII was guided strictly by political desire.
2. Henrys daughter, Elizabeth I, resisted Puritans who wanted more radical Protestantism.
3. The most radical were the Independents (Congregationalists) and Separatists.
4. The Puritans hoped for sympathy from Elizabeths successor, James I, but were disappointed.
5. They began to leave, first for the Netherlands, then for Massachusetts Bay.
II. Massachusetts Bay became a string of thriving towns, stretching westward from Boston.
A. These towns looked like nothing anyone could have found in old England.
1. There was no bishop, no prayer book.
2. Ministers asked for testimonies of grace before admitting people to membership.
B. The most unusual institution was Harvard College (1636), modeled after European universities.
1. The chief tool of learning was logic, not experiment.
2. The principal source of truth was authority, not nature.
3. The principal language was Latin.
4. It aspired to a summary of all knowledge, called technologia.
5. It emphasized classical learning and included nothing practical or vocational.
6. Discoursing well concentrated on victory in argument.
C. This was congruent with the Puritan concentration on the exposition of biblical texts.
1. Puritan biblical exposition began with the doctrine.
2. It proceeded to the uses.
3. It concluded with the application.
III. Two issues became principal Puritan intellectual concerns.
A. First was the place of logic in the Harvard curriculum.
1. Logic referred to both epistemology and axioms.
2. William Ames denied that logic could describe ethics.
B. Second was the structure of human psychology.
1. Right reasoning divided human psychology into faculties.
2. Thomas Aquinas was an intellectualist (intellect is the highest faculty).
3. Ames was a voluntarist (will is the highest faculty).
Essential Reading:
S. E. Morison, Builders of the Bay Colony, chapter 6.
Supplementary Reading:
N. Fiering, Moral Philosophy at Seventeenth-Century Harvard, chapters 14.
P. Miller, The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century, chapters 56.
Questions to Consider:
1. What Calvinistic doctrines were summed up by the acronym TULIP?
2. Why was the debate over faculty psychology between will and intellect important for New England Puritans?
Scope: The Enlightenment made its first beachheads in America in the colonial colleges, beginning with William
Brattle at Harvard but including the College of William & Mary in Virginia, the Academy of Philadelphia,
and Yale. Part of the attraction of Enlightenment thinking was intellectual, but part of it was cultural, as
ambitious Americans aspired to anglicize themselves and bring themselves closer to the intellectual models
of the mother country.
Outline
I. The Enlightenment, as an intellectual event, is harder to describe than political or military events.
A. It is often thought of as an 18th-century event.
1. This is only partly true, given that its remote beginnings can be traced to as early as 1543.
2. Its conclusion can be dated as late as 1815.
B. It is often thought of as an antireligious event.
1. But the Enlightenment challenged only automatic authority, not religion itself.
2. Many Enlightenment thinkers had no trouble finding religion to be a good thing.
C. The Enlightenment is often supposed to be about skepticism and criticism.
1. But it was also a very optimistic movement.
2. Its fundamental aim was not to entertain skepticism but to banish it.
D. The Enlightenment was reared on two basic attitudes:
1. The primacy of reason.
2. The testimony of nature.
E. These attitudes were to offer a rebuttal to skepticism.
1. The results of the religious wars made many Europeans think that nothing could be known for sure.
2. The greatest work of the Enlightenment was to show that something could be known at all.
3. The best example was Ren Descartes.
II. The Cartesian method appealed to Harvard because the college had not known much certainty by 1680.
A. In 1654, President Dunster defected to the Baptists.
1. They repudiated the baptism of children altogether.
2. Dunster resigned under pressure from the Massachusetts General Court.
B. Dunster was followed in the presidency by two clergyman and two physicians.
1. Not until 1684 did Harvard finally get its first star president, Increase Mather.
2. Mather brought to Harvard John Leverett and William Brattle.
C. Brattle was the embodiment of the cautious Enlightenment.
1. His logic textbook, A Compendium of Logick, According to the Modern Philosophy, was the first
beachhead of Cartesian logic in America.
2. But Brattle hoped to dig a new epistemological foundation for Calvinist orthodoxy.
D. Leverett was less cautious in his embrace of the New Philosophy.
1. As president of Harvard, he discouraged Calvinist dogmatism in favor of more Generous Principles.
2. Increase Mather had tried in vain to block Leveretts ascension to the Harvard presidency.
III. Harvard was not the only place in America that faced the challenges of the New Philosophy.
A. Virginia was founded without any guiding religious vision or incentive to found colleges.
1. Virginia was founded as a private corporate enterprise by the Virginia Company, which later went
bankrupt.
2. Until 1685, crown interest in America never moved much beyond tokenism.
B. But by the 1690s, however, the colonies had proven fertile and resourceful.
1. France began waging imperial war through its own North American colonies.
2. The Americans were quite happy to have the British bear the brunt of these imperial expenses
Essential Reading:
J. D. Hoeveler, Creating the American Mind, chapters 2, 9.
Supplementary Reading:
H. F. May, The Enlightenment in America, chapter 2.
P. Miller, The New England Mind: From Colony to Province, chapters 2627.
Questions to Consider:
1. What were the roles played by reason and nature in the Enlightenment?
2. How were the colonists aspirations to be thought of as respectably English connected to the founding of
William & Mary and the Academy of Philadelphia?
Scope: The Enlightenments leading philosophical edge collided with moral conservatism when Hobbes bluntly
promoted the notion that human nature was nothing but material substance. The most sophisticated rebuttal
to materialism came from Bishop George Berkeley, but it was eventually a compromise position that won
the day. Compromise held no allure for Jonathan Edwards, however. Edwards adopted a Berkeleian-style
immaterialism as his philosophical base and then used it not only to repel materialism but to criticize
compromisers among the ranks of New England Puritanism. Ultimately, it became linked to Edwardss role
in the spiritual revival known as the Great Awakening.
Outline
I. The Enlightenment in Europe and in America was fundamentally about epistemology, about how we know
things.
A. One response was to assert the sole existence of material substance (materialism).
1. Human beings are composed entirely of material substance.
2. Freedom of will is an illusion.
3. This view was associated with Julien de La Mettrie, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke.
B. A second response was immaterialism (only spiritual substance exists).
1. This response was most often associated with Bishop George Berkeley.
2. Berkeley argued that there is no guarantee that our ideas represent anything.
C. The third response was a compromise position.
1. This response was most often associated with the Cartesian method and Newtons physics.
2. In this view, material substance was allowed to function without mechanism, directed by God.
3. But the God who emerged from these debates was no longer the God of the Bible.
II. This position did not satisfy the broad spectrum of European opinion, which is why a reawakening of intense
evangelical Christianity occurred.
A. It came in a bewildering variety of forms.
1. In Protestant Germany, it appeared in the form of Pietism.
2. In France, it took the form of Jansenism.
3. In England, it appeared in the Non-Jurors and in the Methodist revivals.
B. But the awakenings shared some important common ground.
1. They shared a common sense of skepticism about the established churches.
2. They sought to recover a more natural religion, the religion of the heart.
III. The best representative of the awakenings in America was Jonathan Edwards.
A. Edwards was born on October 5, 1703, in East Windsor, Connecticut.
1. His grandfather was Solomon Stoddard, the most powerful ecclesiastical figure in western New
England.
2. From both sides of the family, Edwards inherited a distrust of what was going on in Boston and at
Harvard.
3. Stoddard threw to the winds even the Half-Way Covenant, which was a compromise position on the
question of who was entitled to admission to communion and baptism in the Congregational churches
of the Bay Colony.
B. Edwards was sent to Yale in 1716.
1. His education stressed the English and Dutch Protestant scholastics.
2. But he was also introduced to William Brattles Cartesian new logic.
3. He began dabbling in scientific essays and keeping commonplace books with his own speculations on
epistemology and natural science.
4. Edwards was gradually pulled to an immaterialism similar to that of Bishop Berkeley.
Essential Reading:
P. F. Gura, Jonathan Edwards: Americas Evangelical.
Supplementary Reading:
N. Fiering, Jonathan Edwardss Moral Thought and Its British Context,
chapter 1.
J. E. Smith, Jonathan Edwards: Puritan, Preacher, Philosopher, chapters 34.
Questions to Consider:
1. What were the three basic positions taken in the Enlightenment on epistemology?
2. In what ways were Edwards and the awakenings opposed to the Enlightenment? In what respects did they share
its outlook?
Scope: The Great Awakening turned out to be a major force in establishing new colleges in colonial America, as
angry Awakeners turned their backs on Yale or Harvard and founded alternative colleges. But these
colleges were quickly absorbed into the intellectual life of the Enlightenment and laid the foundations for a
synthesis of reason and religion whose foremost example was John Witherspoon.
Outline
I. The Great Awakening saw the founding of new colleges: Princeton, Brown, Rutgers, and Dartmouth.
A. The Awakeners were not always friendly to the colonial colleges.
1. George Whitefield severely criticized Harvard.
2. At Yale, graduate James Davenport held a book burning.
3. David Brainerd, a student, left Yale to become a protg of Edwards.
B. But colleges founded around the will rather than the intellect had a hard time justifying their existence.
1. The Shepherds Tent was forced to close down.
2. The Log College was absorbed into the College of New Jersey, later called Princeton.
C. Princeton showed how difficult it was to reconcile revival with collegiate education.
1. The college was founded by Jonathan Dickinson, Aaron Burr, and Ebenezer Pemberton.
2. Jonathan Edwards died after assuming the presidency in 1758.
3. In 1768, Princeton chose John Witherspoon as president.
II. The arrival of John Witherspoon was a watershed in American collegiate life.
A. Witherspoon had little sympathy for the Awakening or Edwardss immaterialism.
1. Witherspoon subscribed to the Scottish common sense philosophy.
2. John Locke did not believe that we actually could know the objects of our ideas directly.
3. Francis Hutcheson of the University of Glasgow objected that such beliefs made minds passive in
knowing.
4. They also failed to account for why minds have ideas about things that mere sensations cannot account
for.
5. This concept demonstrated the existence of a moral sense.
6. Scottish philosopher Thomas Reid used moral sense epistemology as a foil to David Humes
skepticism.
B. For Witherspoon, Reids and Hutchesons common sense philosophy intersected with traditional scholastic
appeals to natural law and the new political science of natural rights.
1. Minds render a judgment about the certainty of the world.
2. Common sense philosophy also reveals certain fundamental moral principles within us.
3. Just as Reid worked inductively, so all truths must be built up by strict induction.
Essential Reading:
J. D. Hoeveler, Creating the American Mind, chapters 3, 5.
Supplementary Reading:
L. A. Cremin, American Education: The National Experience, chapter 4.
B. Le Beau, Jonathan Dickinson and the Formative Years of American Presbyterianism, chapter 9.
Questions to Consider:
1. How many American colleges were direct or indirect heirs of the Great Awakening?
2. What three basic principles did John Witherspoon find in the Scottish common sense philosophy?
Scope: Britains American colonies had been founded in a haphazard manner and filled the vacuum of British
imperial control by developing their own governments. As the colonies prospered, the imperial government
took more and more notice and took more and more steps to regulate and harness that prosperity. The
colonies resented this intrusion, and they found in the classical liberalism of Whig political theorists a
ready explanation for the legitimacy of their own governments and the evil of British attempts at meddling
with them.
Outline
I. The Spanish and French colonies were state enterprises.
A. They were the property of a king.
B. The king made the governors and viceroys who ruled them afterwards.
II. For the English and the Dutch, however, colonial enterprise was strictly a franchise operation.
A. Only two parties came out winners.
1. One was the imperial government in London.
2. The other was the actual colonists.
B. Virginia organized a House of Burgesses to levy taxes.
1. The problem was that an assembly was illegal.
2. There was only one recognized legislative assembly, Parliament in London.
3. But London was 3,000 miles away, and this assembly cost London no money.
C. The colonial governments did not look like any English legislative assembly.
1. Parliament was far from representative.
2. Two-thirds of the white population of the British colonies owned 60 percent of the land.
3. Colonial elites might look like gentry, but they were dependent on landowning farmers.
4. Governors were restricted in their powers.
5. Unhappy colonists easily resorted to mob actions to get their way.
III. England was a monarchy, but it had never been a stable monarchy.
A. Government in England was described as a three-way system of checks and balances: kinglords
commoners.
1. The people most apt to use this way of describing English politics were Whigs.
2. The term Whig came into use from whiggamore, a country yokel.
3. Whigs liked to think of themselves as the sturdy sons of the countryside.
B. Whiggery was based on four propositions.
1. Liberty is natural and cannot be a gift of a monarch.
2. Liberty can be destroyed, normally by a corrupt elite.
3. Liberty requires an alliance with virtue for protection from corruption and power.
4. Because Whigs prefer virtue to power, they are found outside the centers of power.
C. The Whig ideology was dramatically described by John Locke in his Two Treatises on Government.
1. Locke imagined a point in history before governments existed (the state of nature).
2. By mixing your labor with the natural materials at hand, you create property.
3. People give up a little of the freedom of the state of nature by joining in protective arrangements,
which become governments.
D. Lockes politics was based on three assumptions.
1. The fundamental problems of human life are scarcity and security.
2. Government is an invention of the people to solve those problems.
3. If a government is not doing the job, the people (because they made it) may turn to other forms of
government.
Essential Reading:
B. Bailyn, Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, chapters 12.
Supplementary Reading:
C. S. Hyneman and D. S. Lutz , eds., American Political Writing during the Founding Era, vol. 1, chapters 6, 11
12, 18, 20, 32.
G. S. Wood, Creation of the American Republic, chapters 12.
Questions to Consider:
1. What four ideas are fundamental to the Whig political outlook?
2. Distinguish between classical and liberal republicanism.
Scope: The ideas that made the American Revolution had been under construction long before the Revolution
itself, beginning with the Enlightenments general sense of resistance to authority and continuing through
the colonists religious radicalism and the example of the English Whigs. All the Revolution needed was
the demand of the British government to override the colonies own legislatures and assemblies to set
British North America alight with revolt.
Outline
I. The ideas that paved the road to independence had been at work over a long time.
A. Besides Locke, the Enlightenment contributed a general resistance to traditional authorities.
1. The Scottish common sense philosophy offered an alternative source of authority in natural law.
2. The attitude of benign neglect led the colonies to the necessity of self-government.
B. Religious radicalism encouraged dissent.
1. In New York, wealthy Presbyterian William Livingston made resistance to Kings College a religious
issue.
2. Virginia Baptists posed a challenge to the Anglican ascendancy in Virginia.
II. Parliament began its first attempts at regulating the internal commerce of the colonies in 1764.
A. Before that time, regulation taxed only the colonies external trade across the ocean.
1. Taxation of the colonies domestic economies was done by the colonial legislatures.
2. But if the colonies were mere plantations, why not tax the internal colonial economies?
B. In 1764, Parliament began a series of confrontations over internal tax bills.
1. To the Tories, the Americans needed to be subordinated to their God-given master, the king.
2. To the colonies, legislation should be in their hands.
3. Thomas Paine, in Common Sense, concluded that monarchy was the problem.
4. It took 10 years for the cycle of accusation to turn into violent resistance and, eventually, revolution.
C. The Revolution carried with it all the disparate streams of resistance.
1. Presbyterian preachers turned out in great numbers for the Continental army.
2. John Adams saw the revolution as the dawning of Enlightenment politics.
3. Jeffersons Declaration of Independence was a monument of Lockean simplicity and Scottish moral
sense.
Essential Reading:
P. Maier, American Scripture: Making the Declaration of Independence,
chapter 2.
Supplementary Reading:
M. Jensen, ed., Tracts of the American Revolution, 17631776, chapters. 13, 16.
P. Maier, From Resistance to Revolution, chapter 2.
Questions to Consider:
1. In what ways was the American Revolution an Enlightenment project?
2. What common cause did New York Presbyterians and Virginia Baptists have in the quarrel with Great Britain?
Scope: If America was the darling of the Enlightenment, then the Enlightenments favorite location in America
was Philadelphia, based largely on its extraordinary collection of Enlightenment thinkers and organizations
but also on its commitment to reconciling science and religion along the same path laid out by the Scottish
common sense philosophy.
Outline
I. If America had an intellectual capital after 1740, it was Philadelphia.
A. Philadelphia enjoyed no promising beginning as an intellectual capital.
1. The Quakers were the most radical of the sects spawned by English Puritanism.
2. Quakers looked into their own religious consciousness for the testimony of a Light Within.
3. Philadelphia was a city with broad streets, so that vice might have no place to hide.
B. But the Quakers showed little disposition to create a Quaker paradise in Pennsylvania.
1. Quakers never numbered more than a fraction of the total population.
2. Pennsylvania turned into a mlange of European nationalities, religions, and languages.
C. Presbyterians, Lutherans, German Calvinists, and members of the Church of England came from traditions
with a strong penchant for establishing schools.
1. This proliferation of schools was made possible by Philadelphias rise to commercial power in the
British colonies.
2. Philadelphias population grew to 40,000 in 1776.
II. But Philadelphias richest intellectual assets lay in its cluster of Enlightenment thinkers, beginning with
Benjamin Franklin.
A. Benjamin Franklin was a printer.
1. Printers occupied an unusual place in the intellectual order.
2. Printers lived by publishing an entrepreneurial assortment of newspapers, almanacs, and books.
3. They had to be well read themselves.
4. They were part tradesmen and part literati.
5. They lived by their networks of commercial and intellectual connections.
6. Their insiders view of the world of print inclined them to skepticism.
B. Franklin arrived in Philadelphia in 1723.
1. He began issuing the Pennsylvania Gazette.
2. He issued a successful annual almanac, Poor Richards Almanac.
3. He was George Whitefields printer of choice, and he earned a fortune from the sales of Whitefields
works.
C. What gained him international notice were his experiments in electricity.
1. The Royal Society ignored his letters.
2. Franklin published Experiments and Observations on Electricity, Made at Philadelphia, by Mr.
Benjamin Franklin, in April 1751.
3. In 1752, Franklin published an account of a further experiment with lightning and electricity, flying a
kite with a key in a thunderstorman experiment that he likely never performed himself, knowing
both how dangerous it could be and how tempting it would be for doubters of his findings to try out.
III. Franklin was not the only Philadelphian who found the city opening the way to a love of science.
A. The real center of Philadelphias Enlightenment was the American Philosophical Society (APS).
Essential Reading:
N. Reid-Maroney, Philadelphias Enlightenment, 17401800, chapter 8.
Supplementary Reading:
I. B. Cohen, Science and the Founding Fathers, chapter 3.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did Franklins Deism and the religion of the Philadelphia Enlightenment differ?
2. What caused the demise of the Philadelphia Enlightenment?
Scope: It was only when Americas Whigs actually had a republic on their hands that they realized there was no
agreement on what practical shape a republic should take. Should it follow the example of Jefferson and
classical republicanism or the commercial liberal republicanism of Alexander Hamilton that found its best
expression in The Federalist Papers and the 1787 Constitution?
Outline
I. The success of the American Revolution seemed nearly miraculous.
A. Washington actually stumbled from one defeat to another from 1775 to 1780.
1. Only his own personal example prevented a coup dtat.
2. But it was precisely the armys failures that prevented making a coup a real threat.
B. There were other failures that did not have such silver linings.
1. The independent habits of the colonies led them to buck against each other.
2. The government that the revolutionaries created with the Articles of Confederation did not guarantee
unity.
3. The anglicized elite in America were exiled, and political leadership was opened to people with little
experience.
4. The revolutionaries supposed that a natural virtuous leadership would step into place, but this is not
what happened.
C. Republicans in the 18th century shared certain Whig essentials.
1. They repudiated tradition, hereditary monarchy, and aristocracy.
2. They were suspicious of power, seeing power as the enemy of liberty.
3. They believed in the supremacy of reason, natural law, and natural rights.
4. They found their chief inspiration in the example of republican Rome.
D. What divided them was the split between classical and liberal republicans.
1. Jefferson can be described as a classical republican who feared dependence.
2. Alexander Hamilton was a liberal republican who believed that commerce and agriculture could
become a great national team.
3. Between them stood James Madison, who hoped for a government of classical republican virtue but
did not put too much trust in its spontaneous appearance.
II. In the 1780s and 1790s, Madison and Hamilton got their chance to do something about the Articles of
Confederation and save the Union from dissolution.
A. A commercial convention led to the calling of a Constitutional Convention.
1. The Constitution made no appeal to classical republican virtue.
2. It was filled with skeptical compromises.
3. According to Madison, where virtue failed, self-interest would not.
4. It restrained the states from establishing their own economic policies and made no reference to God or
Christianity.
B. Hamilton and Madison mounted an effective media campaign in The Federalist Papers.
1. By June 1788, the Constitution had been ratified by the necessary number of states.
2. Jefferson, who was serving as ambassador to France, was predictably unenthusiastic.
Essential Reading:
F. McDonald, Alexander Hamilton: A Biography, chapters 1, 8.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did James Madison manage to straddle the ideological division between Jefferson and Hamilton?
2. In what ways did the Constitution reflect the thinking of Hamilton rather than Jefferson?
Scope: As the author of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson occupies one of the premier pedestals
in American memory. But he was also a bundle of contradictions: a politician who detested politics and a
lawyer who preferred scientific experiments. Above all, his experience of debt drove him to spin webs of
fantasy about the glories of independent farming, and that in turn, broke the old revolutionary coalition into
Federalist and Democratic-Republican parties.
Outline
I. With few exceptions, no one stands closer to the heart of Americas national identity than Thomas Jefferson.
A. He was the author of the Declaration of Independence.
1. He defined the Revolution as an experiment in Enlightenment politics.
2. He ascended to the level of a symbol of American liberty.
3. He was an American virtuoso.
B. He was also a man of great intellectual contradictions.
1. Almost his entire life was lived in politics, yet he had little love for it.
2. Jefferson was a poor public speaker, but his conversation was a revelation.
3. Jefferson defined a classical republican political philosophy against the liberal republicanism of
Alexander Hamilton.
C. Jeffersons intellectual maturity was connected to the Scottish Enlightenment.
1. His first tutor, William Douglas, was a Scot.
2. When he arrived at William & Mary, the college was in the hands of another Scot, William Small.
II. Jefferson turned to law as a profession.
A. He studied law under George Wythe in Williamsburg.
1. He was elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses.
2. He published A Summary View of the Rights of British America in 1774.
3. He was sent in 1775 to sit in the Second Continental Congress.
B. Up until the 18th century, law was hardly a profession at all.
1. Administration of the law was in the hands of appointed magistrates and justices of the peace (JPs).
2. Lawyers were little more than gentlemen with a smattering of legal literacy.
3. Law was not terribly lucrative by itself.
4. Criminal law was largely a matter of punishing moral or religious offenses or probating wills.
5. Civil law was preoccupied with matters of inheritance and debt.
C. Colonial law sprang from two sources.
1. One was statute law: law created by the colonial legislatures.
2. The other was British common law.
3. Common law proceedings governed most of colonial law
4. After the Revolution, Americans wondered why their courts should continue to operate by British
common law.
D. Jefferson never developed any significant law practice of his own.
1. He was involved in only 941 cases over seven years.
2. He stopped practicing law altogether after 1776.
3. But legal problems posed by common law became the central problems of his life.
4. Indebtedness threatened him with loss of control.
Essential Reading:
S. Elkins and E. McKitrick, The Age of Federalism, chapters 23.
Supplementary Reading:
L. Banning, The Sacred Fire of Liberty, chapter 10.
J. J. Ellis, American Sphinx, chapter 4.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did the experience of debt color Jeffersons view of republican politics?
2. How did Hamiltons three great reports lay the basis for a commercial republic?
Scope: The Revolution was a great disappointment to religious leaders who hoped to ride its victories to new
levels of moral and cultural authority in the American Republic. But the disciples of Jonathan Edwards
soon learned, first, how to restart the energies of revival and, second, how to turn revivals into agencies of
moral and cultural authority that, although indirect, still succeeded in reversing the fall of the republic into
Enlightenment secularism.
Outline
I. Jonathan Edwards hoped that the Great Awakening was the overture to the millennium.
A. What ultimately followed was not a spiritual millennium at all but a secular revolution.
1. New England Congregationalists and middle-Atlantic Presbyterians rallied to the American cause.
2. The Church of England lost three-quarters of its American clergy.
B. The revolutionary leadership was controlled by men with little interest in Christian theology.
1. Instead of leading the Revolution, the clergy found themselves being used by it.
2. Instead of carving out a new public role for the churches, they found that they had lost the public roles
they once had.
3. The first amendment to the new federal Constitution forbade an establishment of religion.
II. The first response came from the heirs of Jonathan Edwards.
A. The fuel for this lay buried in the pages of Edwardss great treatise on free will.
1. Edwards wanted to demonstrate that human actions were divinely ordered yet still hold people morally
accountable.
2. Edwards called the necessity that involves force natural necessity.
3. The other necessity, which arises from our own inclinations, Edwards called moral necessity.
4. We possess all the natural ability we could ever want not to sin.
B. Edwards himself did not live long enough to put this into full play, but Samuel Hopkins of Massachusetts
and Joseph Bellamy of Connecticut did.
1. Hopkins taught that people were obliged to use all their natural ability to repent.
2. They were also obligated to a life of utterly self-denying, disinterested benevolence toward others.
3. Idealistic theological students flocked to Hopkins and Bellamy for ministerial apprenticeships.
4. These New Divinity Edwardseans lit the bonfires of revival across New England in the Second
Great Awakening.
5. Nathanael Emmons and Asa Burton managed to create new subdivisions within the New Divinity,
between the Taste Scheme and the Exercise Scheme.
6. Charles Grandison Finney ignited revivals in the Mohawk River Valley and became one of the
founders of Oberlin College.
III. The intellectual heirs of Edwards turned the Second Great Awakening into a great cultural force.
A. In a secular republic, the revivalists wrenched control out of the hands of the Deists.
B. American religion did not need an official place in politics to have an influence.
1. Closed off from making policy, the Edwardseans made converts.
2. Unable to legislate, they organized independent societies for everything they were prevented from
doing as organized churches, including abolishing slavery.
C. But revivalism was also a poor instrument for sustaining religious interest.
1. Edwardsean revivalism called people to repentance but also out of society, out of their everyday lives.
2. Its logical end was to turn people into come-outers and inflate a radical individualism.
Supplementary Reading:
J. Butler, Awash in a Sea of Faith, chapters 7, 9.
L. Levy, The Establishment Clause, chapters 34.
Questions to Consider:
1. In what ways did American religion lose ground in the Revolution?
2. How did the Second Great Awakening restore cultural authority to American religion?
Scope: The revivals were not the only way to bring the influence of religion back into public life. The Scottish
common sense philosophy became a vehicle by which religious thinkers reintroduced religious morality
onto the public square by cloaking it in natural law. These moral philosophers dominated the republics
colleges and would have enjoyed even greater influence had they not failed to solve the knottiest of
American problems in public ethics: slavery.
Outline
I. Edwardsean revivalism was one way of solving the problem of how to generate virtue in a republic.
A. It was not, however, the way preferred by Deism or by confessional Protestants.
1. Hamilton accepted that self-interest, rather than virtue, was the basic engine of human action.
2. The Federalist Papers described the Constitution as a natural system that could work purely by checks
and balances, rather than by virtue.
B. An alternative lay in the Scottish common sense philosophy.
1. Before the Civil War, every major collegiate intellectual was a disciple of Scottish common sense
realism.
2. They wanted that epistemology to articulate a public ethic.
C. The common sense philosophy proceeded to build confidence in the reality of the minds perceptions.
1. The human mind was neither passive nor mistaken in its apprehensions of a real exterior world.
2. Purpose and intelligence in the universe also had to be real because these were the default position of
human consciousness.
3. The same intelligence and purpose can be perceived in human nature as well, on the principle of
analogy.
4. This common sense morality yielded moral laws without compelling people to embrace Protestant
Christian theology.
5. It also allowed Protestant Christians to slip the fundamentals of Christian morality into public affairs
without the hubbub of revivalism.
6. The principle of analogy worked so well that it was hard not to get carried away with it.
7. On the other hand, the fact that morality was as real as physics did not mean that everyone naturally
obeyed those laws.
a. People had free will.
b. A consistent pattern of unwise choices could harden the faculties and warp the soul.
II. Scottish moral philosophy contained a number of important anxieties.
A. The first anxiety concerned whether moral philosophy had too little religion.
1. The moral philosophers strained to present uniformity on moral basics.
2. But they taught in church-related colleges that emphasized religious differences.
B. The second anxiety touched on its claims to a purely scientific, nonpartisan parentage.
1. Phrenology tried to read physical nature as human nature.
2. Racism tried to fuse human moral nature with differences in human physical nature.
C. The moral philosophers greatest problem was overreach. They achieved consensus only on trivial matters,
never on critical issues, such as slavery.
D. But the failures of the moral philosophers were still important failures.
1. They forced on their hearers a sense of their moral nature as human beings.
2. Pragmatism and psychology gave no joy, and less humanity, than the moral philosophers.
Supplementary Reading:
D. H. Meyer, The Instructed Conscience, chapters 12, 1112.
T. D. Bozeman, Protestants in an Age of Science, chapter 4.
Questions to Consider:
1. What was the Scottish common sense philosophy and why was it so influential during this time
2. What was the role of analogy in this philosophy?
Abolitionist: An advocate of the immediate abolition of slavery, a position best illustrated in William Lloyd
Garrison.
Agrarian: Term applied to the view that land and agriculture are the only true sources of wealth and that a society
based on agriculture is socially and morally superior to one based on industrial capitalism.
Analogy: A method that discovered lawlike order in human consciousness by extrapolating from observations of
lawlike behavior in physical nature.
Anthropology: The study of the technological, cultural, and social patterns of human life. Pioneered by Franz Boas
and popularized through the work of Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead.
Behaviorism: A form of psychology that asserts that actual behavior is the only legitimate object of psychological
study and that behavior modification is to be achieved through the manipulation and conditioning of responses.
Calvinism: A school of Protestant Christian theology that stresses the absolute sovereignty of God and the
dependence of human will on Gods prior decree.
Capitalism: A set of economic and social relations in which one class owns the means of production and another
class provides the labor, with (a) profit for the first class coming from the surplus value it is able to charge over and
above the wages of the laborers and (b) the profit being turned into investment in more production or capital.
Common sense: Concept developed by Thomas Reid and Francis Hutcheson, who argued that human moral
judgments were made instinctively and uniformly or commonly.
Deism: A generalized belief in a creator who superintends human events only generally and according to natural
law.
Enlightenment: An intellectual event that set aside traditional religious and philosophical authority in preference
for empirical observation and criticism of conventional social and political arrangements and that advocated reliance
on the adequacy of human reason for the solution of problems. Often associated with the promotion of natural law,
liberalism, and republicanism (q.v.).
Epistemology: General philosophical term for theories about how minds know things.
Great Awakening: A large-scale religious revival, lasting from 17391741. Its most prominent figure was George
Whitefield.
Half-Way Covenant: Adopted in 1662 by a general synod of church representatives from the Puritan churches of
Massachusetts Bay, the Half-Way Covenant was a compromise position on the question of who was entitled to
admission to communion and baptism in the Congregational churches of the Bay Colony. With the waning of active
piety in Massachusetts society, the 1662 synod decided to permit the baptism of the children of colonists who did
not qualify for full church membership but to deny them access to communion. This compromise was denounced by
Jonathan Edwards, who wished to return to the more demanding piety of the full-membership requirements in the
1740s. The term was first invented in 1790 by Edwardss pupil, Joseph Bellamy.
Idealism: Philosophical doctrine that minds know only ideas and have no reliable access to objects in an external
world.
Immaterialism: A form of idealism that argues that all existence and causality consist of the mind of God, the finite
minds he has created, and the ideas God imparts to them.
Irony: An attitude of observation that stresses the failure of human intentions to produce the results they expect; as
promoted by Reinhold Niebuhr, it encouraged an attitude of realistic humility about social reform and the
aspirations of American foreign policy.
Liberalism: Term originally applied to opponents of the monarchy who urged the restructuring of society by reason
and civic morality rather than by inherited tradition or religious authority. Economic liberalism was identified in the
19th century with free trade, free markets, and social mobility, but liberalism was more often used in the 20th century
to describe a cultural position of permissiveness, dissent from religious orthodoxy, and moderate Left politics.
Henry Adams (18381918). Great-grandson of John Adams (third president of the United States). Graduated from
Harvard College (1858) and served as secretary to his father, Charles Francis Adams, while the latter was American
minister to Great Britain during the Civil War. Joined the history department at Harvard (18701877). Caustic critic
of the Gilded Age. Wrote History of the United States (18891891), Mont-Saint Michel and Chartres (1904), and
The Education of Henry Adams (1907).
Edward Bellamy (18501898). Journalist and writer. Wrote the quasi-socialist utopian novel, Looking Backward
(1887), predicting a hopeful resolution of the social question of labor and capitalism.
Ruth Benedict (18871948). Anthropologist. Graduated from Vassar College (1909) and studied anthropology
under Franz Boas at Columbia University, where she earned a Ph.D. in 1923. She taught at Columbia from
19281948. Her 1934 book, Patterns of Culture, shaped the development of anthropology as a discipline.
Horace Bushnell (18021876). Congregational clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Yale College (1827)
and was ordained pastor of North Church, Hartford, Connecticut. Published Christian Nurture (1847) and God in
Christ (1849), which introduced Romantic theories of language to Protestant theology.
Eugene V. Debs (18551926). Socialist and labor advocate, he was president of the American Railway Union
during the Pullman strike of 1894. Ran as the Socialist candidate for president in 19001912 and again in 1920.
Jailed during World War I by the Wilson administration for advocating resistance to the draft.
John Dewey (18591952). Philosopher and educator. Graduated from the University of Vermont (1879) and Johns
Hopkins University (Ph.D., 1888). Taught at the University of Michigan and University of Chicago, where he
invented a social version of pragmatism and applied it through the founding of the Laboratory School. Moved to
Columbia University in 1904 and became an advocate for pragmatic reconstruction of philosophy.
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (18681963). Journalist, educator, and activist. Graduated from Fisk
University (1888) and Harvard College (1890). Editor of The Crisis (19101934) and author of the most important
articulation of black American racial consciousness, The Souls of Black Folk (1903).
Jonathan Edwards (17031758). Congregational clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Yale College (1720)
and called as pastor of the church of Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1729. Promoted awakenings in 17341735
and 17391741, which he described and defended in A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God (1737).
Wrote philosophical defenses of Calvinist theology in Freedom of the Will (1754) and Original Sin (1758). Briefly
president of Princeton (17571758).
Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882). Unitarian clergyman and author. Graduated from Harvard College (1822)
and served as minister of the Second Church, Boston (18291832). Wrote Nature (1836) as an American Romantic
declaration. Delivered The American Scholar (1837) as a call for an intellectual break with Europe and the
Divinity School Address (at Harvard) in 1838 as a repudiation of traditional Unitarian theology.
Henry George (18391897). Laborer, journalist, and economist. Wrote Progress and Poverty (1879) to propose a
single-tax solution for redistributing industrial wealth.
Charles Hodge (17971878). Presbyterian clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Princeton (1819) and
became second professor (with Archibald Alexander) at Princeton Theological Seminary. His Systematic Theology
(1873) was a landmark of conservative Protestant thought and represented the incorporation of Scottish common
sense moral philosophy into American theology.
William James (18421910). Philosopher and psychologist. Graduated from Harvard Medical School (1868) and
joined the faculty of Harvard in 1870, where he established the first psychology laboratory. His Principles of
Psychology (1890) was a major force in overthrowing faculty psychology, but he was even better known for
formulating a philosophy of pragmatism in his Lowell Lectures, Pragmatism (1908).
Martin Luther King (19291968). Baptist theologian and civil rights activist. Graduated from Morehouse College
(1948) and Boston University (Ph.D., 1955). Became pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery,
Alabama, in 1954 and assumed leadership of the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955. Eventually became the most
prominent spokesman for black civil rights in the nation.
Primary Sources:
Ahlstrom, Sydney, ed. Theology in America: The Major Protestant Voices from Puritanism to Neo-Orthodoxy.
Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. An outstanding collection from the most influential writings of Edwards,
Bushnell, Nevin, Rauschenbusch, Royce, James, and Niebuhr.
Ames, William. The Marrow of Theology, Translated by J. Eusden. Durham, NC: Labyrinth, 1983. An outstanding
translation of Amess principal theological survey.
Basler, R. P, ed. Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1953. The
standard edition of Lincolns writings, from the great state papers down to the smallest notes.
Blau, Joseph L., ed. American Philosophic Addresses, 17001900. New York: Columbia University Press, 1946.
An anthology of important philosophical orations, including those of Emerson, Wayland, Henry James, Sr.,
Edwards, and Bushnell; organized topically around philosophies of culture, science, and religion.
Bushman, Richard L., ed. The Great Awakening: Documents on the Revival of Religion, 17401745. New York:
Norton, 1970. Differs from the Miller-Heimert anthology by assembling shorter piecesextracts from letters and
newspaper accountsillustrating the immediate impact of the Awakening.
Carey, George W., and James McClellan, eds. The Federalist. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2001. The best edition of
the famous defense of the Constitution by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, keyed to portions of
the Constitution under discussion in the articles.
Carson, Clayborne, ed. The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. New York: Warner Books, 1998. An
assembled autobiography, collected from various autobiographical fragments of Kings.
, et al., eds. The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents, Speeches and First-Hand Accounts from
the Black Freedom Struggle. New York: Penguin, 1991. A substantial anthology of short writings and reports from
the Civil Rights Movement, illuminating its history and conflicts.
Gosse, Van, ed. The Movements of the New Left, 1950-1975: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: St. Martins,
2005. Collects the most important radical manifestoes of the New Left, including the Port Huron Statement.
Hamilton, Alexander. Writings. Edited by Joanne B. Freeman. New York: Library of America, 2001. A useful one-
volume collection of Hamiltons major writings; in the Library of America series.
Howard-Pitney, David, ed. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and the Civil Rights Struggle of the 1950s and
1960s: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: St. Martins, 2004. A short but useful collection of key documents
from the Civil Rights Movement.
Hutchison, William R., ed. American Protestant Thought: The Liberal Era. New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1968.
A short anthology of Protestant liberal theology from Charles Briggs and Walter Rauschenbusch to the 1960s.
Hyneman, C. S., and D. S. Lutz , eds. American Political Writing during the Founding Era, 17601805.
Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1983. A two-volume compilation of texts on the American founding from the lesser-
known but influential writers of the period.
Jensen, Merrill, ed. Tracts of the American Revolution, 17631776. Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. An
anthology of the most prominent and influential pamphlets agitating for American independence, including
Jeffersons Summary View of the Rights of British America.
Kimnach, W. H., K. Minkema, and D. Sweeney, eds. The Sermons of Jonathan Edwards: A Reader. New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1999. A one-volume sampler of Edwardss best-known sermons, from the larger Works of
Jonathan Edwards project at Yale.
Kuklick, Bruce, ed. William James: Writings, 18781899 and 19021910. New York: Library of America, 1987.
The best short collection of Jamess later writings, including generous selections from The Varieties of Religious
Experience, The Will to Believe, The Principles of Psychology, and Pragmatism; in the Library of America series.
Miller, Perry, and Alan Heimert, eds. The Great Awakening. Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. A collection of 53
important documents from the Awakening, including pieces by Edwards and Whitefield, concentrating mainly on
New England and the middle colonies.
Dr. Allen C. Guelzo is the Henry R. Luce Professor of the Civil War Era and Director of Civil War Era Studies at
Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. He is also the Associate Director of the Civil War Institute at
Gettysburg College. He was born in Yokohama, Japan, but grew up in Philadelphia. He holds an M.A. and Ph.D. in
history from the University of Pennsylvania, where he wrote his dissertation under the direction of Bruce Kuklick,
Alan C. Kors, and Richard S. Dunn. Dr. Guelzo taught at Drexel University and, for 13 years, at Eastern University
in St. Davids, Pennsylvania. At Eastern, he was the Grace Ferguson Kea Professor of American History, and from
1998 to 2004, he was the founding dean of the Templeton Honors College at Eastern.
Dr. Guelzo is the author of numerous books on American intellectual history and on Abraham Lincoln and the Civil
War era, beginning with his first work, Edwards on the Will: A Century of American Theological Debate, 1750
1850 (Wesleyan University Press, 1989). His second book, For the Union of Evangelical Christendom: The Irony of
the Reformed Episcopalians, 18731930 (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994), won the Outler Prize for
Ecumenical Church History of the American Society of Church History. He wrote The Crisis of the American
Republic: A History of the Civil War and Reconstruction for the St. Martins Press American History series in 1995
and followed that with an edition of Josiah G. Hollands Life of Abraham Lincoln (1866) in 1998 for the Bison
Books series of classic Lincoln biography reprints of the University of Nebraska Press. Dr. Guelzos book
Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President (Wm. Eerdmans, 1999) won both the Lincoln Prize and the Abraham
Lincoln Institute Prize in 2000. In 2003, his article, Defending Emancipation: Abraham Lincoln and the Conkling
Letter, August, 1863, won Civil War Historys John T. Hubbell Prize for the best article of that year. Dr. Guelzos
most recent work, Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation: The End of Slavery in America (Simon & Schuster,
2004), also won the Lincoln Institute Prize and the Lincoln Prize for 2005, making him the first double Lincoln
Laureate in the history of both prizes. He is now at work on a new book on the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858,
also for Simon & Schuster.
Dr. Guelzo has written for The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, First Things, the
Claremont Review of Books, and Books and Culture and has been featured on NPRs Weekend Edition Sunday
and Brian Lambs Booknotes. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Abraham Lincoln Association, the
Abraham Lincoln Institute, and the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church; a member of the advisory councils
of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission and the McNeil Center for Early American Studies (at the
University of Pennsylvania); and a member of the American Historical Association, the Organization of American
Historians, the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic, the Society of Civil War Historians, and the
Union League of Philadelphia. Dr. Guelzo has been a fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies (1991
1992), the McNeil Center for Early American Studies (19921993), the Charles Warren Center for American
Studies at Harvard University (19941995), and the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at
Princeton University (20022003). Professor Guelzos other Teaching Company courses include Mr. Lincoln: The
Life of Abraham Lincoln and History of the United States, 2nd Edition, which he team-taught with Patrick Allitt and
Gary W. Gallagher.
Dr. Guelzo lives in Paoli and Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, with his wife, Debra.
Professor Biography............................................................................................i
Course Scope.......................................................................................................1
Lecture Thirteen Whigs and Democrats................................................3
Lecture Fourteen American Romanticism .............................................5
Lecture Fifteen Faith and Reason at Princeton ...................................7
Lecture Sixteen Romanticism in Mercersburg.....................................9
Lecture Seventeen Slaveholders and Abolitionists ................................11
Lecture Eighteen Lincoln and Liberal Democracy ..............................13
Lecture Nineteen The Failure of the Genteel Elite...............................15
Lecture Twenty Darwin in America ..................................................17
Lecture Twenty-One Liberalism and the Social Gospel ............................19
Lecture Twenty-Two The Agony of William James ..................................21
Lecture Twenty-Three Josiah RoyceThe Idealist Dissenter .....................23
Lecture Twenty-Four John Dewey and Social Pragmatism........................25
Timeline .............................................................................................................27
Glossary.............................................................................................................30
Biographical Notes............................................................................................33
Bibliography......................................................................................................35
Scope:
This Teaching Company lecture series offers a broad survey of American intellectual history. It is a history of the
ideas, the thinkers, and the institutions that have mattered most to Americans as a people. The 36 lectures in this
series are built around six basic themes in American thinking:
1. The fundamental struggle for importance between intellect and willin other words, whether it is more
important for us to think or to act.
2. The persistence of religious ideas as a living part of American intellectual life.
3. The formation of two souls in the American consciousness, one the product of Puritan religion and the
other the product of Americas embrace of the Enlightenment.
4. The struggle between liberty and power in a democratic society, as seen in the liberal capitalism of
Alexander Hamilton and Abraham Lincoln, and the fierce suspicion of commercial societies seen in
Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson.
5. The dramatic shift in categories of American thinking that occurred in the postCivil War decades, which
turned Americans away from traditional philosophical and social thinking and toward pragmatism and
secularism.
6. The dilemmas posed by the American ascent to world power through two world wars and the
responsibilities that have come with it.
Well begin in Lecture One by confronting a fundamental problem that occurs whenever we try to speak of an
American mind. Americans like to think of themselves as a practical, hands-on, results-oriented kind of people.
How can we be such a hard-headed nation and still really have an intellectual history? Part of the answer to that
question begins with Lecture Two, where we examine the Puritans, who combined a strong scholastic intellectual
inheritance with a deep and uneasy piety that pitted will and intellect against each other in ways that continue to
echo in our ears. We move almost at once in Lecture Three to what is supposed to be the antithesis of Puritan piety,
and that is the American Enlightenmentonly to find that the Enlightenment was not without its own pious unease.
In fact, well find in Lecture Four that one of the brightest gems in the American Enlightenment was also one of its
most determined Puritans, Jonathan Edwards. Lecture Five will, in the same way, use the premier intellectual
institutions of early Americaits collegesto illustrate how the Enlightenment and piety struggled unevenly for
advantage and sometimes for common ground.
Lectures Six through Eight explore the ways in which Enlightenment Americans turned their attention from the
loftier realms of God and truth to politics and why the English Whig republicans exerted so strong a hold on the
American revolutionaries. Two of those revolutionaries, Hamilton and Jefferson, joined to found a new republican
government but soon discovered (as well see in Lectures Nine and Ten) that there could be two powerfully
contradictory ways of thinking about a republic, depending on whether one drank from the fountain of classical
republicanism or liberal republicanism. There might even be a third way, as Lectures Eleven and Twelve will show,
if one allows religion to have its say, as indeed it did, in the very different forms of Edwardsean revivalism and
collegiate moral philosophy.
Lectures Thirteen through Seventeen explore the ways in which these notions of being a republic were tried in the
fire of ideological controversyJacksonians and Whigs, Romantics and Rationalists, slaveholders and
abolitionistsall of which culminated in the explosive conflict of the American Civil War. Lecture Eighteen,
focusing on Abraham Lincoln, shows us how very much the Civil War was a struggle of ideas as well as armies. In
fact, it shows how very much a man of ideas could live within the skin of a professional politician.
The war assured victory to one side in the great struggle of ideas and culture. But it was an enormously costly
struggle, and it left the victors unable to deal with a fresh set of challengesdisillusion with the shallowness of
victory (Lecture Nineteen); the impact of Charles Darwin, which amounted to a sort of second Enlightenment
(Lecture Twenty); and the scramble of American religion to define a new place for itself in industrial America
(Lecture Twenty-One). A handful of thinkerswith Josiah Royce as the principal exampletried to find a new
ground for stability and absolute truths, but Royce stood little chance against the cheerful philosophical pragmatism
Scope: Republican political theory, whether liberal or classical, deplored political parties as factions that
substituted the self-interest of the faction for the general good of the republic. Nevertheless, both Hamilton
and Jefferson emerged as the heads of parties in the 1790s, and though Hamiltons Federalists were
overmatched by Jeffersons Democratic-Republicans, the triumphant Jeffersonians themselves split in the
1830s over the same issues that had caused the Hamilton-Jefferson divide; from that split emerged the
Whigs, led by Henry Clay.
Outline
I. Nothing in the federal Constitution anticipated the emergence of political parties.
A. But the ideological division between Hamilton and his Federalists and Jefferson and his Democratic-
Republicans (or simply Republicans) became too great.
1. Federalist and Republican clubs and newspapers sprang up.
2. Candidates began presenting themselves to the voters as Federalists or Republicans.
3. In 1804, Hamilton was mortally wounded in a duel fought with Jeffersons disciple, Aaron Burr.
B. Federalists have generally come off the worse in American historical memory.
1. Hamilton feared provincialism, small-mindedness, habit, and oligarchy.
2. This won for the Federalists the approval of city merchants, urban workers, and most of New England.
C. Jefferson thought the Federalists had sold their souls to the British.
1. He looked upon his election as a mandate to undo everything Federalist.
2. But the Federalist economic policies were already set too firmly for Jefferson to dislodge.
3. Jeffersons embargo triggered the first national economic collapse.
4. Jeffersons successor, Madison, declared war on Britain in 1812.
5. But without a national bank, there was no money to fund an army or a navy.
II. The War of 1812 convinced the younger Jeffersonians to moderate Jeffersonianism.
A. Henry Clay began as a Jeffersonian.
1. But he began promoting a national bank, government-sponsored internal improvements, and
protective tariffs.
2. By 1824, the Jeffersonians had fractured as a party.
3. In 1834, Clay called for the creation of a new political coalition, called Whigs.
B. The Whigs formed a unique political culture.
1. The Whigs attracted merchants and cash-crop farmers.
2. The Whigs were interested in transforming the nation by moral improvement.
3. The Whigs believed that the goals of farmers, industrial workers, merchants, and factory owners could
all be reconciled into a harmony of interests.
C. Andrew Jacksons Democrats saw themselves as the victims of conspiracy and became the party of
suspicion.
1. The Democrats saw a world rimmed by threat, from the British, from creditors, from tax collectors.
2. The Democrats wanted to be left alone with their slaves and their own personal constructions of
morality or religion.
3. They were Romantics by nature.
Essential Reading:
D. W. Howe, Political Culture of the American Whigs, chapters 12.
Supplementary Reading:
D. W. Howe, Making the American Self, chapters 2, 4.
R. V. Remini, Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union, chapter 13.
Scope: The Enlightenments glorification of reason, which had seemed so exciting in the 1600s and 1700s, began
to seem pale and colorless by the mid-1700s, and it fostered a backlash in the form of Romanticism. Much
as the American Republic was the offspring of Enlightenment political theory, the influence of religious
revivalism and the distaste of Brahmin intellectuals for democratic politics combined to breed an American
Romanticism, with New England Transcendentalism as its most talented manifestation.
Outline
I. By 1815, the Enlightenment seemed to have come to a dead end.
A. The French Revolution and Bonaparte disillusioned many.
1. Edmund Burke criticized founding politics purely on human reason.
2. Joseph de Maistre attacked the idea of universal human rights.
B. Burke also rejected the Enlightenments entire epistemological project.
1. What art should strive to capture was the sublime.
2. This attack on Enlightenment reason became known as Romanticism.
C. The Romantics saw the same problem with reason that the Scottish common sense philosophers had seen in
Locke and Hume.
1. Immanuel Kant believed minds contain certain in-built categories.
2. At best, descriptions of external reality were purely phenomenal.
3. But in the noumenal, an understanding of the thing-in-itself existed.
4. Reason could never become transcendent; but it could become transcendental.
II. European Romantics turned the full force of their scorn on America.
A. The American Republic was successful but shallow.
1. Americans had no real national identity.
2. Americans were united solely by the hope of materialistic gain.
B. Some Americans agreed with this assessment.
1. Jefferson was constantly pulled in Romantic directions.
2. Edwards appealed to the religious affections as a sufficiently valid justification for Protestant
Calvinism.
C. The first serious American Romantic philosopher was James Marsh.
1. Marsh was appointed president of the University of Vermont in 1826.
2. In 1829, Marsh published an edition of Samuel Taylor Coleridges Aids to Reflection.
D. The most important American Romantic, however, was Ralph Waldo Emerson.
1. Emerson appealed for a division of epistemology into natural philosophy and transcendental
philosophy.
2. Emerson moved to Concord, Massachusetts.
E. His most important philosophical work was Nature (1836), in which he proposed three goals.
1. Emerson advocated the complete complementarity of humanity and nature.
2. This goal was achieved through the displacement of reason.
3. His final goal was the naturalization of religion.
4. Emerson founded a philosophical club in Cambridge that earned the name Transcendentalist.
F. Few of the Transcendentalists found successful outlets for their ideas.
1. Bronson Alcott tried to create an experimental school built around Transcendentalist principles in
Concord.
2. Feminist Margaret Fuller left for Italy to report on the Italian revolution.
3. George Ripley organized a Transcendentalist commune at Brook Farm.
Essential Reading:
R. D. Richardson, Emerson: The Mind on Fire.
Supplementary Reading:
L. Buell, Emerson, chapter 1.
A. Kazin, God and the American Writer, chapter 2.
Questions to Consider:
1. What did Emerson mean by Transcendentalist?
2. What fundamental attitudes inspired the Romantics to rebel against the Enlightenment?
Scope: The challenge offered to religion by Enlightenment reason was never as stark and uncompromising as it
seemed. Many Enlightenment figures continued to experiment in various forms of religion, and many
religious thinkers embraced and assimilated the principles of reason into new and more persuasive forms of
religion. The Princeton Theology, based at Princeton Theological Seminary and pioneered by Archibald
Alexander and Charles Hodge, offered a particularly significant example for 19th-century Americans of
how Americas Enlightenment and religious souls could be combined, instead of pitted against each other.
Outline
I. Theology remained the principal focus of American intellectual energy before the Civil War.
A. This did not mean that the colleges were merely theological seminaries.
1. The collegiate curriculums were organized around the classics.
2. They were intended to give formation to a class of gentleman professionals.
3. But from the 1730s onwards, aspiring Americans sought specialized graduate education, particularly in
medicine and law.
4. By 1808, graduate theological schools outnumbered both medical and legal schools.
B. The preeminent seminary was the Presbyterian seminary organized at Princeton in 1812.
1. It had the largest student body by 1846.
2. It enjoyed the teaching of Archibald Alexander and Charles Hodge.
C. The critical figure was Archibald Alexander.
1. He was named the first professor at Princeton Theological Seminary when he was 39 years old.
2. Alexander occupied a middle ground between the revivalists and the Enlightenment.
3. This middle ground was based on wedding the Scottish philosophy to evangelical earnestness.
4. Alexander had been heavily schooled in Witherspoon.
5. His key concepts were continuity, morality, and the priority of the intellect over the will.
6. On these grounds, Alexander taught the literal truth of the Bible.
D. Charles Hodge had far more training in languages and exegesis than Alexander.
1. He gave the idea of divine inspiration of the Bible its most sophisticated shape.
2. Reading the Bible required the use of induction rather than deduction.
3. Hodges 1857 article on Inspiration described the Bible as a living partnership between God and the
Bibles human writers.
II. Hodge and the Princeton Theology were miles apart from the Romantics.
A. Hodge was very much a man of the Enlightenment.
1. He was a Whig who detested Democratic Romanticism.
2. He had scant patience with Emerson and Edwards Amasa Park, the last of the New England
Edwardseans.
B. Yet Hodge was a man of deep and intense personal piety.
1. Crippled by rheumatoid arthritis, he was sympathetic to human suffering.
2. Hodges guiding star was the reconciliation of faith and reason.
Essential Reading:
M. A. Noll, The Princeton Theology, chapters 617.
Supplementary Reading:
L. A. Loetscher, Facing the Enlightenment and Pietism, chapter 14.
J. W. Stewart and J. H. Moorhead, eds., Charles Hodge Revisited, chapters 23.
Scope: American Romanticism often took the form of a rebellion against past authority. Some conservative forms
of Romanticism, however, embraced the past and glorified tradition and history as a different way of
questioning the supremacy of reason. Like the Transcendentalists, conservative Romantics found their
philosophical underpinnings in European philosophers. Much as they praised tradition, however, they also
subverted its authority and pitched American religion further into skepticism toward traditional Christian
dogmatism.
Outline
I. Unlike Emerson, some Romantics found the real problem in modern Christianity to be in the modern part.
A. One example was the political Romantics.
1. De Maistre thought the political past captured an organic historical truth.
2. Nations overthrow their historical institutionstheir churches and their kingsat their own peril.
B. Another example was in the historical philosophy of Hegel.
1. Hegel doubted whether anybody ever achieved complete breaks with the past.
2. Old ideas were not replaced by something entirely new.
3. Instead, old and new swung back and forth in struggle and debatethesis, antithesis, and synthesis.
4. Whatever was new still incorporated a good deal of the old.
C. A third model was in the religious Romanticism of Ren de Chateaubriand.
1. Chateaubriands worship of the past was aesthetic rather than philosophical.
2. The Beauty of Christianity encouraged skeptics to come back to the church because its aesthetics were
sublime.
3. Chateaubriand captured the novelists, the poets, the playwrights, and the composers.
II. The great outpost of Romantic conservatism was the German Reformed theological seminary in Mercersburg,
Pennsylvania.
A. The German Reformed Church held aloof from the Great Awakening.
1. Eager to preserve their ancestral creed, called the Heidelberg Catechism, the heads of the church
founded a theological seminary.
2. They hired Freidrich Augustus Rauch as its president.
B. To assist Rauch, they recruited an American Presbyterian, John Williamson Nevin.
1. Nevin grew up under the spell of Edwardsean revivalism.
2. But he had turned his back on the Edwardseans after reading Marshs edition of Coleridges Aids to
Reflection.
C. Nevins first work on behalf of Romantic Christianity was a short pamphlet, The Anxious Bench.
1. It criticized the notion that Christian faith was a matter of Edwardss logical abstractions.
2. To Nevin, the church was a holy and mystical body.
D. Nevin followed this work with The Mystical Presence.
1. Nevin charged that the German Reformed Church had drifted away from seeing the Communion as
central to the life of the church.
2. Nevin was contemptuous of making Christianity out of theological propositions or biblical analysis.
3. What mattered most to Nevin was not the churchs doctrine but its experience of worship through its
liturgy.
4. In 1851, Nevin considered whether he needed to convert to Roman Catholicism.
III. Nevin was by no means alone in feeling the lure of Romantic Christianity.
A. The Episcopal Church was founded out of the ruins of the colonial Church of England.
1. Its leader, William White of Philadelphia, was another example of Philadelphia religious rationalism.
Essential Reading:
W. H. Hart, John Williamson Nevin, chapters 23.
Supplementary Reading:
D. G. Conser, Church and Confession, chapter 7.
C. Welch, Protestant Thought in the Nineteenth Century, vol. 2, chapter 9.
Questions to Consider:
1. How was Mercersburgs critique of the Enlightenment different from Princetons?
2. In what ways did Nevin object to the legacy of Edwards?
Scope: The use of slave labor was the one blot on the record of American liberty, and it was made more
disgraceful by the way it was allied to racial stigma and the way it defined slaves as chattel property. Slave-
owning pandered to white racial demagoguery, and it acquired both political clout and ideological
apologists. Most embarrassing of all, it was attacked, not on the basis of Enlightenment reason, but by the
most radical religious Romantics.
Outline
I. The 19th century was the great age of emancipations.
A. The Enlightenment could find no justification for marginalizing one group of people on the basis of
nonessential characteristics.
1. Prussia naturalized Jews as citizens.
2. Russia emancipated its serfs.
3. Great Britain lifted civil restrictions on Roman Catholics.
B. But in the United States, slavery persisted.
1. About 11.5 million blacks were ripped away from their native continent.
2. Half went to the French, English, and Spanish islands of the West Indies.
3. A little more than 10 percent of these people were sent to North America.
4. Cotton-growing gave slave labor a new lease on life in the Southern states.
II. What made slavery in the 19th century more unusual was race.
A. Africans whom the European explorers met seemed racially alien.
1. It was easy to assume that Africans were also brutish.
2. The idea of a slave was routinely associated with dark skin.
B. The law codes of the American South defined slaves as chattel.
1. A slave might marry but only with the masters permission.
2. The marriage itself would not be recognized in law.
3. The slave-owners power included the free application of violence.
C. Slave-owning became the common platform on which all Southern whites could stand together.
1. James Henry Hammond argued that every society required a mud-sill class.
2. George Fitzhugh, the most radical of slaverys defenders, declared that free labor was in a worse
condition than slave labor.
D. Few Northern states attempted to do anything about slavery.
1. Not until 1827 did New York abolish slavery.
2. In 1819, Missouri entered the Union as a slave state.
III. Nothing seemed more unlikely than an emancipation movement in the North in the 1830s.
A. The gadfly of the new abolitionism was William Lloyd Garrison.
1. Garrison was inspired by New Englands regional resentment of Southern interests in Washington.
2. He was also moved by Baptist evangelicalism.
B. A more remarkable influence on Garrison came from the Romantics.
1. The politics of the revolutionary generation were governed by prudence.
2. For Kant, it is not prudence but the act of commitment that is the badge of genuine freedom.
3. Garrisons newspaper, The Liberator, spoke in the tones of a Romantic revivalist.
C. Garrisonian abolitionism split and resplit along the lines of faction, rumor, gender, and ill will.
1. Womens role in abolition organizations split antislavery societies.
2. Garrisons antipolitical stance threatened to split the abolition movement.
D. But several common assumptions remained.
1. One was that the cause was a religious one.
Essential Reading:
H. Mayer, All on Fire, chapters 1, 1115.
Supplementary Reading:
R. H. Abzug, Cosmos Crumbling, chapter 1.
J. Stauffer, The Black Hearts of Men, chapter 1.
Questions to Consider:
1. What were the influences that converged in William Lloyd Garrison?
2. What made the slavery of blacks in the American Republic different from earlier forms of slavery?
Scope: Abraham Lincoln was Americas last great Enlightenment politician. Although he was a lawyer and
politician, he possessed important intellectual curiosities and habits and had allied his political shrewdness
to Whig political ideology. It was on that basis that he developed a profound hostility to the expansion of
slavery. His election as president finally delivered the nations political initiative into the hands of an
opponent of slavery, but it was the Civil War that gave him the opportunity both to destroy slavery and to
install the Whig economic and political agenda as the reigning American ideology.
Outline
I. Abraham Lincoln was neither a philosopher nor an intellectual.
A. But he had precocious intellectual gifts.
1. He went into business in New Salem, Illinois, at age 21.
2. He was licensed as a practicing attorney in 1837.
3. He embraced the Whigs as his party.
4. He had a reputation for infidelity because, unlike his radical Calvinist parents, his heroes were the
free thinkers of the Enlightenment.
B. His most constant intellectual interest was in free will.
1. Lincoln believed that there was no freedom of the will.
2. This belief was the real spring of Lincolns charity.
II. Lincolns career as a trial lawyer was in civil law.
A. He was involved in the development of American capitalism.
1. Capitalism can be defined by its labor system.
2. It can also be defined by markets.
3. It depends on a relationship between the economy and government.
4. Capitalism is also an attitude built out of intelligence, risk-taking, and entrepreneurship.
B. Lincolns embrace of liberal capitalism was similar to Hamiltons liberal republicanism.
1. Lincolns beliefs were reinforced by his reading of John Stuart Mill and Francis Wayland.
2. His notion of equality meant equal access to self-improvement.
III. Slavery presented Lincoln with a contradiction of liberal capitalism.
A. But Lincoln was restrained by his regard for the Constitution.
1. Slavery was not a federal matter.
2. He was horrified by the abolitionists disregard for the Constitution.
B. That did not mean that there was nothing that could be done at all.
1. Congress could forbid the expansion of slavery into any of the territories.
2. It could offer federally funded buyouts.
IV. The proof of the real political punch of Lincolns strategy was the formation of the Confederacy.
A. What followed was the Civil War.
1. The war was costly in lives and materials.
2. But it provided Lincoln with the legal justification to emancipate the slaves.
B. None of these events conformed to any pattern of liberal progress Lincoln had known.
1. They drove him to look for explanations in theology.
2. His second inaugural address speculated on Gods hidden purposes in bringing the war upon the
country.
3. What began as a struggle to secure liberal democracy had become an intellectual and theological
mystery.
Essential Reading:
Supplementary Reading:
M. Burlingame, The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln, chapter 2.
O. Fraysse, Lincoln, Land, and Labor, chapters 45.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did Lincolns strategy for dealing with slavery differ from that of the abolitionists?
2. What aspects of a capitalist economy were the most attractive ones for Lincoln?
Scope: The Civil War cast a terrible pall over the nations self-confidence. Despite the preservation of the Union,
the shocking experience of combat and the reign of corruption that followed in the wars wake
disenchanted many American thinkers with religious orthodoxy and democratic society. The postwar
decades became the Gilded Age, dominated by corporate models of organization and the cackle of
cynical social critics.
Outline
I. The Civil War was responsible for several major changes in national life.
A. The first changes were political.
1. The defeat of the Confederacy prevented the disintegration of the American Union.
2. Not only was self-government possible, but majority rule was the best means for it.
B. The next changes were social ones.
1. The most important was the abolition of slavery.
2. Lincoln also pushed through Congress Henry Clays American System.
C. But these changes came at a staggering price.
1. Of a total of 3.5 million soldiers, roughly 640,000 died.
2. Emancipation erased $2.4 billion in assets represented by the Souths slaves.
3. The national debt soared from $65 million to $2.7 billion.
II. The sheer volume of these changes unhinged something in the national mind.
A. Religious confidence was especially traumatized.
1. The randomness of death wrecked peacetime faith in God.
2. Never again would evangelical Christianity so dominate public life.
B. The balance of power in political ideology was changed.
1. The war raised Lincolns Republicans to an ascendancy they enjoyed until 1932.
2. The obstacles in the path of banking, corporations, and manufacturing collapsed.
a. Before the war, only 7 percent of American manufacturing was organized in corporations.
b. The task of meeting the wars needs spurred the corporate reorganization of American business.
c. By 1900, corporations accounted for 69 percent of all American business.
C. The American generation that inherited this postwar landscape despised itself.
1. The period was tagged as the Gilded Age.
2. Henry Adams, grandson of John Quincy Adams, was enraged at the betrayal by government of the
public trust.
3. Adams chose to glorify the Southern grandees.
D. Southerners coped with defeat by inventing the story of the Lost Cause.
1. According to the Lost Cause, the Confederacy was about the defense of authentic culture and
resistance to Yankee industrialization; it had nothing to do with slavery.
2. The Lost Cause appealed to self-critical Northerners to whom the Gilded Age had given second
thoughts about the Whig ideal of individual self-improvement.
III. The most obvious place where this notion of community ought to have emerged was in the colleges.
A. But the postwar colleges were secularized research institutions whose driving purpose was to provide
human capital to American industry.
B. The money that made them possible came from the corporate kings.
C. The model for these institutions was the German university.
1. The German principles were lernfreiheit (the freedom of students to devise their own programs) and
lehrfreiheit (the freedom of a professor to pursue his subject without political consequences).
2. Between 1848 and 1870, 35 colleges established scientific departments.
Essential Reading:
C. Smith, The Secular Revolution, introduction.
Supplementary Reading:
J. Turner, Without God, Without Creed, chapter 5.
E. Samuels, Henry Adams, chapters 56.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did the new postwar colleges and universities serve the interests of the corporations?
2. What people in the Gilded Age did Henry Adams love and loathe, and why?
Scope: The impact of Darwins Origin of Species was delayed in America by the Civil War. But in the postwar
decades, Darwin knocked out the last props that supported a public or social role for religion and produced
social philosophies that lauded unrestrained competition and the survival of the economically richest.
Outline
I. Enlightenment thought steadily shrank the territory to be explained by the work of God.
A. The one piece that remained securely in Gods hands was the beginning; the Enlightenment still required
God to explain how things got started in the first place.
1. Humes Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion saw nothing in nature but struggle.
2. Thomas Malthuss Essay on the Principle of Population explained life in a bleak struggle for survival.
3. Herbert Spencer, a one-time railroad engineer who had become interested in the ancient fossil species
that his rail excavations turned up, coined the phrase survival of the fittest.
B. In 1838, Darwin formulated the final link in evolutionary theory, the idea of natural selection.
1. Organisms acquire some variation that gives them an edge in the struggle.
2. This variation allows the individual to survive and reproduce.
3. The accumulation of modifications explained the origin of speciesnot creation.
4. This theory transformed biology into a neat organic system with no divine intervention.
II. The turmoil of the Civil War blunted the American reception of the Origin of Species until after 1865.
A. Some were appalled at the Origin of Species.
1. Charles Hodge charged that it was simply atheism.
2. Louis Agassiz, a Swiss-born zoologist, believed that Darwin had violated the rules of induction.
3. Harvard botanist Asa Gray was puzzled about how the small changes conveyed any real advantages.
B. But Darwin also acquired important converts.
1. Harvard graduate Chauncey Wright converted to natural selection almost at once.
2. Henry Adams thought it described the randomness he had seen during the war.
C. A more popular way of interpreting natural selection was Social Darwinism.
1. Social Darwinism actually predated the Origin of Species.
2. Its formulator was Herbert Spencer.
3. Whereas Puritans and Whigs had once been able to tell Americans to improve themselves for the glory
of God, Social Darwinism allowed them to pursue self-improvement for the good of the species.
4. Gilded-Age business tycoons used it as a justification for acquiring Gilded-Age fortunes.
5. William Graham Sumner of Yale turned to Social Darwinism as the key to restoring true equality to
American life.
a. Sumner believed that the government had to deal only with defending the property of men and the
honor of women against crime.
b. The moment it attempted to do more than that, it created unnatural imbalances that gave
opportunity for corruption and favor-granting.
c. Sumner saw himself as the champion of the productive and deserving middle class, which is
pillaged by the government.
Essential Reading:
E. H. Madden, Chauncey Wright.
Supplementary Reading:
R. Hofstadter, Social Darwinism in American Thought, chapters 13.
T. J. Schlereth, Victorian America, chapter 2.
Scope: Evolution simultaneously removed the single greatest restraint on the triumph of science and posed a
revolting moral problem to thinkers who embraced a Darwinian account of human origins but shrank from
applying the logic of natural selection to human society. The result was a struggle to accommodate some
new form of religion to Darwinism, and this flowered in religious liberalism and the Social Gospel.
Outline
I. Darwin and the Civil War posed challenges to religious belief.
A. One option was theological liberalism.
1. Theological liberalism was no kin to the political uses of the term.
2. It was more of an attitude than a working reconciliation of Darwin and theology.
B. In New England, its most famous voice was Horace Bushnell.
1. Bushnells God in Christ denied that theological language contained literal facts.
2. In addition to Bushnell, the most popular voices of this new theology were Henry Ward Beecher,
David Swing, and Phillips Brooks.
3. Its most famous academics were Charles Augustus Briggs and Newman Smyth. Briggs, in particular,
had a taste for controversy and pushed liberal theology into the headlines. In 1893, he was suspended
from the Presbyterian ministry.
4. In 1924, 150 dissident Presbyterian clergy published the Auburn Affirmation, which resurrected many
of Briggss teachings.
II. A more practical alternative to liberalism was the Social Gospel.
A. The Social Gospel shared with Bushnell the need to rebuild American society as an organic community.
1. Bushnell had hoped that the Civil War would teach Americans the need for social solidarity.
2. But it was precisely the individualism Bushnell deplored that turned itself loose during the Gilded
Age.
3. The irony of the Social Gospel is that so many of the movements figures had been forced away from
orthodoxy by Darwin, only to take up arms against Darwin when natural selection took the form of
Gilded-Age capitalism.
B. The principal figure in the Social Gospel was Walter Rauschenbusch.
1. In 1886, Rauschenbusch was ordained pastor of a German Baptist congregation in New York City,
next to what was known as Hells Kitchen.
2. He agonized over the ugly realities of working-class life in the tenements.
3. The Kingdom of God became Rauschenbuschs primary theological slogan, which meant for him
the transformation of the social order into a cooperative spiritual society.
4. Rauschenbusch believed that the new social sciences would allow people to devise solutions.
5. He wrote the most important manifestoes of the Social Gospel, Christianity and the Social Crisis
(1907), Christianizing the Social Order (1912), and A Theology for the Social Gospel (1918).
C. Rauschenbusch had hoped that the Social Gospel would reconcile liberals and conservatives.
1. Instead, it convinced conservatives to withdraw from any form of social activism for fear of being
tainted by liberal theology.
2. The orthodox, instead, withdrew from the major denominations to found small fundamentalist splinter
groups of their own.
Essential Reading:
C. H. Evans, The Kingdom Is Always but Coming, chapters 411.
Supplementary Reading:
P. A. Carter, The Spiritual Crisis of the Gilded Age, chapter 3.
Questions to Consider:
1. What did Rauschenbusch mean by the Kingdom of God?
2. Why were Bushnells ideas on language and community as much a threat to orthodoxy as Darwin?
Scope: No family in America followed an intellectual path as tortured as that of William Jamess, and his own life
was a gentle but persistent struggle to reconcile the austere demands of Darwin, materialism, and science
on the one hand and the attractions of religion on the other. The combined impact of Darwin and the
disillusion of postCivil War America wrenched stability and predictability out of his hands (something
reflected in the way James reconceived the operations of human psychology), and it was only in
pragmatism that James found room for hope and peace of mind.
Outline
I. William James was torn between science and the consolations of belief.
A. James possessed one of the more peculiar family heritages in America.
1. His father, Henry James, Sr., was raised on the importance of religion and the importance of money.
2. One of his younger brothers, Henry James, Jr., became one of the most successful novelists of the 19th
century.
3. His sister, Alice James, remained a neurotic cripple all her life.
4. His other younger brothers, Garth and Robertson, both volunteered for service in the Civil War, with
Garth dying in 1883 of the effects of his war wounds and Robertson lapsing into alcoholism and dying
in 1910.
B. James suffered from uncertainty of purpose.
1. He entered the Lawrence Scientific School to study chemistry.
2. In 1864, he entered Harvards medical school.
3. A year later, he sailed with Louis Agassiz on a scientific expedition to Brazil.
4. He collapsed into a breakdown but experienced a psychological rebirth.
5. In the early 1870s, he turned his attention to the study of psychology.
II. No subject called psychology existed in the first half of the 19th century in America.
A. The concept was understood to belong to the theologians and philosophers.
1. They attempted to sort out the human mind in terms of its various faculties: will, judgment, intellect,
and so forth.
2. Its method was introspection.
B. By the 1840s, the German universities were redefining psychology.
1. It was no longer a spiritual or philosophical exploration.
2. Instead, it was a function of material and physical responses to stimulation.
C. This redefinition was reinforced by the critics of the Scottish common sense philosophy.
1. Alexander Bain and John Stuart Mill wanted to recast the mind as a mechanical association of ideas
with things.
2. Darwin gave psychology an additional push toward becoming a physical science.
III. In 1875, James established the first primitive psychological laboratory at Harvard.
A. Jamess Principles of Psychology became the first American textbook on psychology.
1. James argued that thought functioned more like a stream than as faculties.
2. He believed that the mind was an organ, evolved for a use, which was to ensure survival.
B. James began gravitating toward the philosophy department at Harvard.
1. He began arguing against the scientific attitude.
2. He felt that one could create options beyond an all-or-nothing scenario.
3. In an incomplete universe, nothing is yet finalized, and truth depends on what the situation is at the
moment.
4. People have a right to believe what they want, not an obligation to believe what the evidence seems to
dictate.
Essential Reading:
G. E. Myers, William James, chapter 14.
Supplementary Reading:
C. Brent, Charles Sanders Peirce, chapter 2.
R. W. B. Lewis, The Jameses, chapters 12, 56, 16.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did James redirect Peirces original concept of pragmatism?
2. What did James mean when he insisted that people had a right to believe?
Scope: William Jamess pragmatism suited the temperament of a postwar generation that had lost its faith in
absolutes. But if pragmatism suited James as a replacement for absolutes, it left Josiah Royce unsatisfied.
Royce represents both the last serious effort by an American philosopher to build a workable notion of
idealism and the last American philosopher who commanded an important public audience for philosophy.
Outline
I. William James considered pragmatism as radical empiricism.
A. James objected when people imagined that thoughts and things were two different sorts of objects.
1. James believed that pure experience was the only material in the world.
2. James had no time for idealist thinkers who thought reality was somewhere outside themselves.
B. This viewpoint often gave Jamess pragmatism an overtone of disillusionment and contempt.
1. It seemed to leave people to negotiate the perils of existence without any tools except experience.
2. It seemed to allow unfettered individualism to crush the soul of American community.
II. The task of fashioning a pragmatic idealism fell to Josiah Royce.
A. Unlike James, disadvantage seemed to dog Royce at every step of his path.
1. His parents were Forty-Niners.
2. He graduated from the new University of California, scraping by financially on scholarships.
3. He continued his studies in Germany, where he fell under the spell of Immanuel Kant.
B. For Royce, Kant pointed toward how one might fill the vacuum left by evolutions dethronement of God.
1. Kant insisted that minds were not merely the passive recipients of sensations.
2. There were vital organizing categories, such as time and space, hardwired into the consciousness.
3. If minds create knowledge, then the principle of mind itself triumphs over the vast, messy array of
material substances awash in the world.
4. The material substance of the world must be ruled over by an Absolute Mind, a notion that gave Royce
a welcome sense of religious awe.
C. Royce encountered James at Johns Hopkins.
1. They made an odd-looking pair of friends, the delicate, refined James and the homely, inelegant
Royce.
2. James prevailed on Harvard President Charles William Eliot to hire Royce.
3. James gave Royces idealism a pragmatic twist by asking not what the source of thought is but what
purpose thought serves.
4. Royce added that what the mind contributes to these ideas is organization.
D. Unlike James, Royce was concerned not only with how knowledge makes us act but also with whether that
knowledge is true.
1. James considered the truthfulness of an idea an irrelevant abstraction.
2. Royce observed that when an idea is not true, we do not call it an idea but an error.
3. If an idea is erroneous, then it is inescapable that an idea can also be true.
4. We make judgments about truth and error because they can be compared to an Absolute.
E. Royces Absolute pointed away from Jamess skepticism and individualism.
1. For Royce, there is an Absolute, and our task is to find that Absolute.
2. When we do so, the result will be not individualism but harmony.
III. Royce labored to work out the implications of Absolute pragmatism.
A. His greatest concern was the relationship of minds to other minds.
1. Royces path to social harmony lay through loyalty.
2. When someone is loyal to a cause, he or she is united to more than personal interests.
3. We should choose for our cause whatever promotes loyalty in others.
Essential Reading:
B. Kuklick, The Rise of American Philosophy, chapters 1416, 20.
Supplementary Reading:
M. Clark, Worldly Theologians, chapter 3.
B. Kuklick, Josiah Royce, chapters 2, 11.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did Royce rewrite pragmatism to point it toward the creation of the Beloved Community?
2. Why has Royce always seemed to live in the shadow of William Jamess reputation?
Scope: John Dewey shared William Jamess skepticism about absolutes, although his skepticism was born, not out
of the Civil War but out of the furious postwar battles of capital and labor in Gilded-Age America. Dewey
translated Jamess pragmatism, which served for James as a personal philosophical therapy for modern
anxiety, into an optimistic but morally relativistic social policy in which social democracy, rather than the
assuagement of personal doubt, was the ultimate pursuit.
Outline
I. Not all pragmatists wanted to confine pragmatism to the personal.
A. John Dewey saw pragmatism as a social method.
1. Dewey originally followed Hegel, under the influence of H. A. P. Torrey.
2. His first philosophical essay was published in The Journal of Speculative Philosophy.
3. In 1882, Dewey began graduate study at Johns Hopkins University.
4. He wrote his dissertation on Kants Psychology.
5. In 1888, he was hired at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor.
6. In 1894, he moved to the University of Chicago.
B. Dewey arrived at the height of the great Pullman Railway Car strike.
1. The Pullman workers had been organized by Eugene V. Debs.
2. Deweys confidence in an organic universe united by a mysterious Absolute disappeared.
3. Instead, society was a shapeless collection of individuals, and the purpose of philosophy was to
impose democratic order on it.
II. Deweys solution turned in the direction of education, particularly the public school systems.
A. In 1896, Dewey opened the Laboratory School of the University of Chicago.
1. Dewey believed teaching was about preparing children for real life in a democracy.
2. This education involved teaching useful trades and habits of tolerance and cooperative play and
allowing the child to develop imagination.
B. Dewey made clear the philosophical connections to his experiment in schooling.
1. In 1896, he published The Reflex Arc Concept in Psychology.
2. The reflex arc was Deweys term for the abstract way people think that knowledge takes place.
3. Learning was a quick, rapid circuit, not a collection of separate mental acts.
4. Knowledge was not the result of experience; instead, knowledge and experience grew up together.
5. James was enthused about Deweys application of pragmatism to education.
III. In 1904, Dewey moved to Columbia University.
A. He turned his attention to applying reconstruction to philosophy.
1. Philosophy needed to be redefined as a code word for social purpose.
2. Reconstruction meant the end of religion.
3. Reconstruction required the triumph of science.
B. This view posed two oddities for a pragmatist.
1. James conceived of pragmatism as open-ended toward religion.
2. As much as Dewey disdained fixed solutions to social problems, his preoccupation with democracy
was itself a fixed solution.
C. These were not the only inconsistencies in Deweys life.
1. He preached sociability and democracy but was himself a loner.
2. He never formally joined a political party but embraced American intervention into World War I.
3. By the time of his death, Dewey had eclipsed James as the voice of pragmatism and had become
exactly the kind of authority he taught Americans to shun.
Supplementary Reading:
A. Feffer, The Chicago Pragmatists and American Progressivism, chapter 7.
L. Menand, The Metaphysical Club, chapters 10, 1213, 15.
Questions to Consider:
1. What were the principal points of difference between James and Dewey?
2. What did Dewey mean by reconstruction in philosophy?
Abolitionist: An advocate of the immediate abolition of slavery, a position best illustrated in William Lloyd
Garrison.
Agrarian: Term applied to the view that land and agriculture are the only true sources of wealth and that a society
based on agriculture is socially and morally superior to one based on industrial capitalism.
Analogy: A method that discovered lawlike order in human consciousness by extrapolating from observations of
lawlike behavior in physical nature.
Anthropology: The study of the technological, cultural, and social patterns of human life. Pioneered by Franz Boas
and popularized through the work of Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead.
Behaviorism: A form of psychology that asserts that actual behavior is the only legitimate object of psychological
study and that behavior modification is to be achieved through the manipulation and conditioning of responses.
Calvinism: A school of Protestant Christian theology that stresses the absolute sovereignty of God and the
dependence of human will on Gods prior decree.
Capitalism: A set of economic and social relations in which one class owns the means of production and another
class provides the labor, with (a) profit for the first class coming from the surplus value it is able to charge over and
above the wages of the laborers and (b) the profit being turned into investment in more production or capital.
Common sense: Concept developed by Thomas Reid and Francis Hutcheson, who argued that human moral
judgments were made instinctively and uniformly or commonly.
Deism: A generalized belief in a creator who superintends human events only generally and according to natural
law.
Enlightenment: An intellectual event that set aside traditional religious and philosophical authority in preference
for empirical observation and criticism of conventional social and political arrangements and that advocated reliance
on the adequacy of human reason for the solution of problems. Often associated with the promotion of natural law,
liberalism, and republicanism (q.v.).
Epistemology: General philosophical term for theories about how minds know things.
Great Awakening: A large-scale religious revival, lasting from 17391741. Its most prominent figure was George
Whitefield.
Half-Way Covenant: Adopted in 1662 by a general synod of church representatives from the Puritan churches of
Massachusetts Bay, the Half-Way Covenant was a compromise position on the question of who was entitled to
admission to communion and baptism in the Congregational churches of the Bay Colony. With the waning of active
piety in Massachusetts society, the 1662 synod decided to permit the baptism of the children of colonists who did
not qualify for full church membership but to deny them access to communion. This compromise was denounced by
Jonathan Edwards, who wished to return to the more demanding piety of the full-membership requirements in the
1740s. The term was first invented in 1790 by Edwardss pupil, Joseph Bellamy.
Idealism: Philosophical doctrine that minds know only ideas and have no reliable access to objects in an external
world.
Immaterialism: A form of idealism that argues that all existence and causality consist of the mind of God, the finite
minds he has created, and the ideas God imparts to them.
Irony: An attitude of observation that stresses the failure of human intentions to produce the results they expect; as
promoted by Reinhold Niebuhr, it encouraged an attitude of realistic humility about social reform and the
aspirations of American foreign policy.
Liberalism: Term originally applied to opponents of the monarchy who urged the restructuring of society by reason
and civic morality rather than by inherited tradition or religious authority. Economic liberalism was identified in the
19th century with free trade, free markets, and social mobility, but liberalism was more often used in the 20th century
to describe a cultural position of permissiveness, dissent from religious orthodoxy, and moderate Left politics.
Henry Adams (18381918). Great-grandson of John Adams (third president of the United States). Graduated from
Harvard College (1858) and served as secretary to his father, Charles Francis Adams, while the latter was American
minister to Great Britain during the Civil War. Joined the history department at Harvard (18701877). Caustic critic
of the Gilded Age. Wrote History of the United States (18891891), Mont-Saint Michel and Chartres (1904), and
The Education of Henry Adams (1907).
Edward Bellamy (18501898). Journalist and writer. Wrote the quasi-socialist utopian novel, Looking Backward
(1887), predicting a hopeful resolution of the social question of labor and capitalism.
Ruth Benedict (18871948). Anthropologist. Graduated from Vassar College (1909) and studied anthropology
under Franz Boas at Columbia University, where she earned a Ph.D. in 1923. She taught at Columbia from
19281948. Her 1934 book, Patterns of Culture, shaped the development of anthropology as a discipline.
Horace Bushnell (18021876). Congregational clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Yale College (1827)
and was ordained pastor of North Church, Hartford, Connecticut. Published Christian Nurture (1847) and God in
Christ (1849), which introduced Romantic theories of language to Protestant theology.
Eugene V. Debs (18551926). Socialist and labor advocate, he was president of the American Railway Union
during the Pullman strike of 1894. Ran as the Socialist candidate for president in 19001912 and again in 1920.
Jailed during World War I by the Wilson administration for advocating resistance to the draft.
John Dewey (18591952). Philosopher and educator. Graduated from the University of Vermont (1879) and Johns
Hopkins University (Ph.D., 1888). Taught at the University of Michigan and University of Chicago, where he
invented a social version of pragmatism and applied it through the founding of the Laboratory School. Moved to
Columbia University in 1904 and became an advocate for pragmatic reconstruction of philosophy.
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (18681963). Journalist, educator, and activist. Graduated from Fisk
University (1888) and Harvard College (1890). Editor of The Crisis (19101934) and author of the most important
articulation of black American racial consciousness, The Souls of Black Folk (1903).
Jonathan Edwards (17031758). Congregational clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Yale College (1720)
and called as pastor of the church of Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1729. Promoted awakenings in 17341735
and 17391741, which he described and defended in A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God (1737).
Wrote philosophical defenses of Calvinist theology in Freedom of the Will (1754) and Original Sin (1758). Briefly
president of Princeton (17571758).
Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882). Unitarian clergyman and author. Graduated from Harvard College (1822)
and served as minister of the Second Church, Boston (18291832). Wrote Nature (1836) as an American Romantic
declaration. Delivered The American Scholar (1837) as a call for an intellectual break with Europe and the
Divinity School Address (at Harvard) in 1838 as a repudiation of traditional Unitarian theology.
Henry George (18391897). Laborer, journalist, and economist. Wrote Progress and Poverty (1879) to propose a
single-tax solution for redistributing industrial wealth.
Charles Hodge (17971878). Presbyterian clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Princeton (1819) and
became second professor (with Archibald Alexander) at Princeton Theological Seminary. His Systematic Theology
(1873) was a landmark of conservative Protestant thought and represented the incorporation of Scottish common
sense moral philosophy into American theology.
William James (18421910). Philosopher and psychologist. Graduated from Harvard Medical School (1868) and
joined the faculty of Harvard in 1870, where he established the first psychology laboratory. His Principles of
Psychology (1890) was a major force in overthrowing faculty psychology, but he was even better known for
formulating a philosophy of pragmatism in his Lowell Lectures, Pragmatism (1908).
Martin Luther King (19291968). Baptist theologian and civil rights activist. Graduated from Morehouse College
(1948) and Boston University (Ph.D., 1955). Became pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery,
Alabama, in 1954 and assumed leadership of the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955. Eventually became the most
prominent spokesman for black civil rights in the nation.
Primary Sources:
Ahlstrom, Sydney, ed. Theology in America: The Major Protestant Voices from Puritanism to Neo-Orthodoxy.
Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. An outstanding collection from the most influential writings of Edwards,
Bushnell, Nevin, Rauschenbusch, Royce, James, and Niebuhr.
Ames, William. The Marrow of Theology, Translated by J. Eusden. Durham, NC: Labyrinth, 1983. An outstanding
translation of Amess principal theological survey.
Basler, R. P, ed. Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1953. The
standard edition of Lincolns writings, from the great state papers down to the smallest notes.
Blau, Joseph L., ed. American Philosophic Addresses, 17001900. New York: Columbia University Press, 1946.
An anthology of important philosophical orations, including those of Emerson, Wayland, Henry James, Sr.,
Edwards, and Bushnell; organized topically around philosophies of culture, science, and religion.
Bushman, Richard L., ed. The Great Awakening: Documents on the Revival of Religion, 17401745. New York:
Norton, 1970. Differs from the Miller-Heimert anthology by assembling shorter piecesextracts from letters and
newspaper accountsillustrating the immediate impact of the Awakening.
Carey, George W., and James McClellan, eds. The Federalist. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2001. The best edition of
the famous defense of the Constitution by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, keyed to portions of
the Constitution under discussion in the articles.
Carson, Clayborne, ed. The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. New York: Warner Books, 1998. An
assembled autobiography, collected from various autobiographical fragments of Kings.
, et al., eds. The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents, Speeches and First-Hand Accounts from
the Black Freedom Struggle. New York: Penguin, 1991. A substantial anthology of short writings and reports from
the Civil Rights Movement, illuminating its history and conflicts.
Gosse, Van, ed. The Movements of the New Left, 1950-1975: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: St. Martins,
2005. Collects the most important radical manifestoes of the New Left, including the Port Huron Statement.
Hamilton, Alexander. Writings. Edited by Joanne B. Freeman. New York: Library of America, 2001. A useful one-
volume collection of Hamiltons major writings; in the Library of America series.
Howard-Pitney, David, ed. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and the Civil Rights Struggle of the 1950s and
1960s: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: St. Martins, 2004. A short but useful collection of key documents
from the Civil Rights Movement.
Hutchison, William R., ed. American Protestant Thought: The Liberal Era. New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1968.
A short anthology of Protestant liberal theology from Charles Briggs and Walter Rauschenbusch to the 1960s.
Hyneman, C. S., and D. S. Lutz , eds. American Political Writing during the Founding Era, 17601805.
Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1983. A two-volume compilation of texts on the American founding from the lesser-
known but influential writers of the period.
Jensen, Merrill, ed. Tracts of the American Revolution, 17631776. Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. An
anthology of the most prominent and influential pamphlets agitating for American independence, including
Jeffersons Summary View of the Rights of British America.
Kimnach, W. H., K. Minkema, and D. Sweeney, eds. The Sermons of Jonathan Edwards: A Reader. New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1999. A one-volume sampler of Edwardss best-known sermons, from the larger Works of
Jonathan Edwards project at Yale.
Kuklick, Bruce, ed. William James: Writings, 18781899 and 19021910. New York: Library of America, 1987.
The best short collection of Jamess later writings, including generous selections from The Varieties of Religious
Experience, The Will to Believe, The Principles of Psychology, and Pragmatism; in the Library of America series.
Miller, Perry, and Alan Heimert, eds. The Great Awakening. Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. A collection of 53
important documents from the Awakening, including pieces by Edwards and Whitefield, concentrating mainly on
New England and the middle colonies.
Dr. Allen C. Guelzo is the Henry R. Luce Professor of the Civil War Era and Director of Civil War Era Studies at
Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. He is also the Associate Director of the Civil War Institute at
Gettysburg College. He was born in Yokohama, Japan, but grew up in Philadelphia. He holds an M.A. and Ph.D. in
history from the University of Pennsylvania, where he wrote his dissertation under the direction of Bruce Kuklick,
Alan C. Kors, and Richard S. Dunn. Dr. Guelzo taught at Drexel University and, for 13 years, at Eastern University
in St. Davids, Pennsylvania. At Eastern, he was the Grace Ferguson Kea Professor of American History, and from
1998 to 2004, he was the founding dean of the Templeton Honors College at Eastern.
Dr. Guelzo is the author of numerous books on American intellectual history and on Abraham Lincoln and the Civil
War era, beginning with his first work, Edwards on the Will: A Century of American Theological Debate, 1750
1850 (Wesleyan University Press, 1989). His second book, For the Union of Evangelical Christendom: The Irony of
the Reformed Episcopalians, 18731930 (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994), won the Outler Prize for
Ecumenical Church History of the American Society of Church History. He wrote The Crisis of the American
Republic: A History of the Civil War and Reconstruction for the St. Martins Press American History series in 1995
and followed that with an edition of Josiah G. Hollands Life of Abraham Lincoln (1866) in 1998 for the Bison
Books series of classic Lincoln biography reprints of the University of Nebraska Press. Dr. Guelzos book
Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President (Wm. Eerdmans, 1999) won both the Lincoln Prize and the Abraham
Lincoln Institute Prize in 2000. In 2003, his article, Defending Emancipation: Abraham Lincoln and the Conkling
Letter, August, 1863, won Civil War Historys John T. Hubbell Prize for the best article of that year. Dr. Guelzos
most recent work, Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation: The End of Slavery in America (Simon & Schuster,
2004), also won the Lincoln Institute Prize and the Lincoln Prize for 2005, making him the first double Lincoln
Laureate in the history of both prizes. He is now at work on a new book on the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858,
also for Simon & Schuster.
Dr. Guelzo has written for The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, First Things, the
Claremont Review of Books, and Books and Culture and has been featured on NPRs Weekend Edition Sunday
and Brian Lambs Booknotes. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Abraham Lincoln Association, the
Abraham Lincoln Institute, and the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church; a member of the advisory councils
of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission and the McNeil Center for Early American Studies (at the
University of Pennsylvania); and a member of the American Historical Association, the Organization of American
Historians, the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic, the Society of Civil War Historians, and the
Union League of Philadelphia. Dr. Guelzo has been a fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies (1991
1992), the McNeil Center for Early American Studies (19921993), the Charles Warren Center for American
Studies at Harvard University (19941995), and the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at
Princeton University (20022003). Professor Guelzos other Teaching Company courses include Mr. Lincoln: The
Life of Abraham Lincoln and History of the United States, 2nd Edition, which he team-taught with Patrick Allitt and
Gary W. Gallagher.
Dr. Guelzo lives in Paoli and Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, with his wife, Debra.
Professor Biography............................................................................................i
Course Scope.......................................................................................................1
Lecture Twenty-Five Socialism in America.................................................3
Lecture Twenty-Six Populists, Progressives, and War...............................5
Lecture Twenty-Seven Decade of the Disenchanted ......................................7
Lecture Twenty-Eight The Social Science Revolution ..................................8
Lecture Twenty-Nine The New South versus the New Negro....................10
Lecture Thirty FDR and the Intellectuals ........................................12
Lecture Thirty-One Science under the Cloud ..........................................14
Lecture Thirty-Two Ironic Judgments......................................................16
Lecture Thirty-Three Mass Culture and Mass Consumption .....................18
Lecture Thirty-Four Integration and Separation.......................................20
Lecture Thirty-Five The Rebellion of the Privileged...............................22
Lecture Thirty-Six The Neo-Conservatives ...........................................24
Timeline .............................................................................................................26
Glossary.............................................................................................................29
Biographical Notes............................................................................................32
Bibliography......................................................................................................34
Scope:
This Teaching Company lecture series offers a broad survey of American intellectual history. It is a history of the
ideas, the thinkers, and the institutions that have mattered most to Americans as a people. The 36 lectures in this
series are built around six basic themes in American thinking:
1. The fundamental struggle for importance between intellect and willin other words, whether it is more
important for us to think or to act.
2. The persistence of religious ideas as a living part of American intellectual life.
3. The formation of two souls in the American consciousness, one the product of Puritan religion and the
other the product of Americas embrace of the Enlightenment.
4. The struggle between liberty and power in a democratic society, as seen in the liberal capitalism of
Alexander Hamilton and Abraham Lincoln, and the fierce suspicion of commercial societies seen in
Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson.
5. The dramatic shift in categories of American thinking that occurred in the postCivil War decades, which
turned Americans away from traditional philosophical and social thinking and toward pragmatism and
secularism.
6. The dilemmas posed by the American ascent to world power through two world wars and the
responsibilities that have come with it.
Well begin in Lecture One by confronting a fundamental problem that occurs whenever we try to speak of an
American mind. Americans like to think of themselves as a practical, hands-on, results-oriented kind of people.
How can we be such a hard-headed nation and still really have an intellectual history? Part of the answer to that
question begins with Lecture Two, where we examine the Puritans, who combined a strong scholastic intellectual
inheritance with a deep and uneasy piety that pitted will and intellect against each other in ways that continue to
echo in our ears. We move almost at once in Lecture Three to what is supposed to be the antithesis of Puritan piety,
and that is the American Enlightenmentonly to find that the Enlightenment was not without its own pious unease.
In fact, well find in Lecture Four that one of the brightest gems in the American Enlightenment was also one of its
most determined Puritans, Jonathan Edwards. Lecture Five will, in the same way, use the premier intellectual
institutions of early Americaits collegesto illustrate how the Enlightenment and piety struggled unevenly for
advantage and sometimes for common ground.
Lectures Six through Eight explore the ways in which Enlightenment Americans turned their attention from the
loftier realms of God and truth to politics and why the English Whig republicans exerted so strong a hold on the
American revolutionaries. Two of those revolutionaries, Hamilton and Jefferson, joined to found a new republican
government but soon discovered (as well see in Lectures Nine and Ten) that there could be two powerfully
contradictory ways of thinking about a republic, depending on whether one drank from the fountain of classical
republicanism or liberal republicanism. There might even be a third way, as Lectures Eleven and Twelve will show,
if one allows religion to have its say, as indeed it did, in the very different forms of Edwardsean revivalism and
collegiate moral philosophy.
Lectures Thirteen through Seventeen explore the ways in which these notions of being a republic were tried in the
fire of ideological controversyJacksonians and Whigs, Romantics and Rationalists, slaveholders and
abolitionistsall of which culminated in the explosive conflict of the American Civil War. Lecture Eighteen,
focusing on Abraham Lincoln, shows us how very much the Civil War was a struggle of ideas as well as armies. In
fact, it shows how very much a man of ideas could live within the skin of a professional politician.
The war assured victory to one side in the great struggle of ideas and culture. But it was an enormously costly
struggle, and it left the victors unable to deal with a fresh set of challengesdisillusion with the shallowness of
victory (Lecture Nineteen); the impact of Charles Darwin, which amounted to a sort of second Enlightenment
(Lecture Twenty); and the scramble of American religion to define a new place for itself in industrial America
(Lecture Twenty-One). A handful of thinkerswith Josiah Royce as the principal exampletried to find a new
ground for stability and absolute truths, but Royce stood little chance against the cheerful philosophical pragmatism
Scope: The postwar wave of corporate industrial organization was met by an opposing wave of working-class
resistance, and that resistance was frequently attracted by the promise of socialism. Socialism as an
ideology, however, had few takers in America. Its partisans were often foreign-born and marginalized by
American culture. Socialism as a practice went through many stages and was mostly fixed on negotiating
for bigger pieces of the capitalist pie, rather than overthrowing a capitalist economic regime.
Outline
I. American socialists saw socialism as a means rather than an end.
A. It followed three basic patterns.
1. One group thought of itself simply as American idealists.
2. Another was internationalist in its perspective.
3. A third included those who celebrated the reality of socialism but who rejected the name.
B. One example of the last category was Henry George.
1. George was shocked by the changes the Civil War and the Gilded Age had brought to the eastern
United States.
2. George offered a solution in the idea of rent.
3. People who have land to rent or to sell at inflated prices obtain an income that they have done nothing
to earn, and they create greater misery for the poor.
4. George proposed a land-value tax.
5. But he actively refused to be labeled a socialist.
C. Another example of those who did not want to be associated with socialism was Edward Bellamy.
1. The Haymarket Riot in 1886 dissolved Bellamys patience with Gilded-Age capitalism.
2. In 1887, he published a futuristic novel, Looking Backward.
a. In the book, all American laborers were mobilized into a single national industrial army.
b. All workers were issued a national credit card, with equal shares credited to them.
3. Bellamy also denied that he was a socialist.
4. George and Bellamy were concerned about alleviating capitalisms evils, not replacing it.
II. European immigration brought a more radical brand of socialism to America.
A. Immigrant intellectuals were contemptuous of utopianism or single-tax solutions.
1. In 1876, German socialist migrs founded the Workingmens Party of the United States, but the party
promptly split; American union leaders were less interested in promoting a socialist doctrine than in
getting a bigger share of the capitalist pie.
2. The party was reinvented as the Socialist Labor Party, led by Daniel DeLeon, who had no use for trade
unions unless they were fully committed to a root-and-branch assault on capitalism.
3. DeLeon helped organize a union ready to draw blood, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).
B. DeLeon actually composed the mainstream of American socialism.
1. Johann Most was a true believer in the necessity for outright class warfare.
2. Most passed his enthusiasm on to the IWW and William Big Bill Haywood.
III. The greatest success in recruiting a viable socialist movement went to Eugene Victor Debs and the Socialist
Party (SP) he organized in 1901.
A. Debs was the key figure in the great Pullman Strike.
1. He could not share DeLeons fundamentalist Marxism.
2. He recruited almost 120,000 members for the SP by 1912.
B. Still, socialism in America never acquired much of a following.
1. American workers merely wanted greater opportunities to better themselves.
2. The German migr socialists were ineffective in communicating their doctrine.
3. Liberal democracy supplied all the needs that Americans had for an ideology.
Essential Reading:
J. P. Diggins, The Rise and Fall of the American Left, chapters 23.
Supplementary Reading:
D. McLellan, Marxism after Marx, chapter 24.
D. Ross, The Origins of American Social Science, chapter 4.
Questions to Consider:
1. Why did the migr socialists fail so miserably in rallying American workers?
2. Were George and Bellamy practical reformers or merely utopian dreamers?
Scope: Not only urban workers but farmers in the postwar decades had grievances to register with corporate
America, and in the 1880s, those grievances crystallized in the form of Populism. However, Populism was
as easily marginalized as socialism. The most important reform ideology in the decades after the Civil War
was a resolutely middle-class one, Progressivism, where the main concern was not about redistribution or
revolution as much as it was about efficiency.
Outline
I. After preservation of the Union, the Homestead Act of 1862 was the second most important byproduct of the
Civil War, running neck in neck with emancipation.
A. This less understood piece of legislation provided for the wholesale liquidation of federally owned land in
the West.
1. Settlers occupied the Great Plains, the Dakotas, Montana, Colorado, and Idaho.
2. But the Great Plains contained arid, inhospitable, and useless soil.
3. Within a matter of years, many farmers were heavily mortgaged or foreclosed or bankrupted.
B. Those same farmers could not miss noticing how different the world was for the new corporations.
1. Farmers fought back by organizing the Farmers Alliance in the 1880s.
2. They captured the Democratic Party and, in 1896, nominated William Jennings Bryan for president.
C. Populism looked like a perfect match for Debss Socialists in the cities.
1. But an alliance between Populists and Socialists had no real chance.
2. Populism celebrated the rural past and the self-reliant farmer, not the industrial worker.
II. Populists and the Socialists were co-opted by the Progressives.
A. Progressivism was the movement of the middle class, convinced that corporate capitalism had to be saved
from itself.
1. Progressivism came, not only from the middle class but from business.
2. Progressives worshipped efficiency, and efficiencys guru was Frederick Winslow Taylor
3. Progressivisms bible was Herbert Crolys The Promise of American Life.
B. The great figureheads of Progressivism were its politicians.
1. Theodore Roosevelt took the same attitude toward running the federal government as to running any
efficient organization.
2. Roosevelt made Progressive reform both popular and elitist.
3. This gave Progressivism a distaste for real democratic politics and life.
4. The Progressives were greeted coldly by the Populists because farmers and workers wanted power to
control their own lives, not gifts from governments.
5. No one embodied this particular Progressive hubris more than Woodrow Wilson.
6. Wilson argued that the Constitutions separation of powers was wasteful and inefficient.
7. World War I gave Wilson the opportunity to exercise presidential power fully.
C. World War I made Progressives uneasy.
1. Randolph Bourne, a pupil of John Dewey, objected that Wilson would kill democracy.
2. Wilsons administration turned a blind eye to the persecution of German immigrants.
3. At the end of the war, Wilson devised a formula for international peace and a League of Nations.
4. Wilsons allies laughed at him, and the American people rejected the League of Nations.
5. After Wilson suffered a debilitating stroke in 1919 and died in 1920, much of the energy of
Progressivism died as well.
Essential Reading:
T. Fleming, The Illusion of Victory, chapters 1, 912.
Questions to Consider:
1. How did the Progressives differ from the Populists and the Socialists?
2. How did Woodrow Wilsons policies conform to the pattern of Progressivism?
Scope: The idealism with which Woodrow Wilson led America into World War I, and the dreary disappointments
that followed in its wake, produced a deeply jaded rejection of all idealisms, moral and political. The great
voices of the 1920s were the skeptics, cynics, and mockers, who debunked not only American tradition but
American reform and delighted in reducing explanations of American behavior to selfishness and stupidity.
Outline
I. World War I undermined all confidence that Europeans or Americans really possessed a civilization.
A. Americans recoiled from Wilsonian idealism.
1. In a spasm of debunking, they rejected the war as a fraud.
2. They turned their guns on every moving idealism in American life.
B. The prince of the debunkers was Sinclair Lewis.
1. Lewis was a mocker.
2. He scorned small-town America in Main Street, Babbitt, and Elmer Gantry.
3. Central to all the hypocrisies of Middle America was religion.
C. The other great debunker was Henry Louis Mencken.
1. Where Lewis spouted contempt, Mencken was content with sarcasm.
2. He loathed Wilson as the Archangel Woodrow.
3. Mencken dismissed democracy itself as the booboisie.
4. His most famous target was William Jennings Bryan.
5. Mencken deputized himself as a reporter to cover the Scopes trial.
II. The 1920s also created an academic form of debunking.
A. In 1884, William James articulated a theory (the James-Lange theory) of emotions that defined them as
automatic responses to perception.
1. This theory was popularized as behaviorism by John Broadus Watson.
2. The most famous behaviorist was B. F. Skinner.
B. But Americans could not live by debunking alone.
1. The behaviorists alternative was the hollow man of the psychologists.
2. Democracy, if it could not be an expression of a free human will, could not have very much to say for
itself.
Essential Reading:
E. J. Larson, When All the Gods Trembled.
Supplementary Reading:
D. W. Bjork, B. F. Skinner, chapter 7.
J. M. ODonnell, The Origins of Behaviorism.
Questions to Consider:
1. What was behaviorism?
2. Did the mockery of Lewis and Mencken succeed in discrediting the targets of that mockery?
Scope: The idea that human societies could be reduced to scientific analysis was another byproduct of the
Enlightenment, which saw no reason why the discovery of physical law should not be matched by the
discovery of social law. But the development of social science in America quickly became mixed with
Romanticism, as the earliest anthropologists employed racism and Euro-American superiority as categories
and as professional anthropologists used the results of their research to debunk conventional American
mores.
Outline
I. William James admired, but also suspected, Sigmund Freuds invention of psychoanalysis.
A. James could not reconcile himself entirely to Freuds atheism and his determinism.
1. In Jamess pluralistic universe, Freuds dogmatic atheism was unjustified.
2. Free will was the idea James believed rescued him from collapse.
B. But the decade of the debunkers belonged more to Freud than James.
1. Debunkers of the 1920s read Freuds description of repression and compared it to Wilsons idealism
and Bryans fundamentalism.
2. But the assault on repression required a respectably scientific process, in the form of anthropology and
sociology.
II. American anthropology began with the work of Henry Rowe Schoolcraft.
A. Schoolcraft turned Native American Indians into a subject of scholarly inquiry.
1. But neither Schoolcraft nor Lewis Henry Morgan, a lawyer who studied Indian societies, emerged as
champions of the Indian way of life.
2. Morgans Ancient Society assumed that all societies pass through certain stages on the path to modern
civilization.
3. Native peoples were always enacting a stage through which Euro-Americans had previously passed
(recapitulation).
B. The doctrine of recapitulation was overthrown by Franz Boas at Columbia University.
1. Boas taught that cultures do not recapitulatethey diffuse and have lives of their own.
2. Hence, every culture is worthy of respect on its own terms and cannot be reduced to a mere stage on
the evolutionary path to universal Westernization.
C. Ruth Benedict, a student of Boas, turned Boass doctrine of diffusion into cultural relativism.
1. Culture was a pursuit of harmony, but each culture produced integration in differing ways.
2. Anthropology was a lever of criticism to be used in exposing fundamental certainties as mere customs.
D. The best illustration of cultural relativity came from Margaret Mead, another of Boass students.
1. In Coming of Age in Samoa, the process of sexual maturation was described as fun.
2. Mead asked whether Americans wouldnt be happier if they adopted the sexual mores of the Samoans.
E. The fieldwork of Boas, Benedict, and Mead earned for anthropology a place among the social sciences.
1. But how scientific was their work?
2. Much of it arose from an impulse shared with the debunkers to find a hoax around every corner.
3. In 1983, New Zealand anthropologist Derek Freeman found that Mead had had little direct contact
with Samoan young people herself and that Samoans were quite puritanical about sex.
Essential Reading:
M. M. Caffrey, Ruth Benedict.
Supplementary Reading:
A. Douglas, Terrible Honesty, chapters 1, 34.
Questions to Consider:
1. What was the significance of Franz Boas for the development of anthropology?
2. To what extent did the work of Mead and Benedict cross the line between description (telling how matters
appeared) and prescription (telling how they should appear)?
Scope: In its struggle to emerge from the ashes of defeat, the postCivil War South was torn between holding
embitteredly to a vision of a Southern past typified by the Lost Cause myth and submission to the industrial
system of the victorious North. But even this New South contained elements that faced backwards,
which emerged in both the Southern Agrarians of the 1930s and the imposition of Jim Crow legislation on
American blacks. This, in turn, posed a challenge to black ambitions and took the shape of the differing
strategies of Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois.
Outline
I. Southern intellectual life after the Civil War was a struggle to define the region as a New South.
A. Henry Woodfin Grady, editor of the Atlanta Constitution, declared that the New South put business above
politics.
1. But many Southerners remained unmoved.
2. The Southern Historical Society maintained the nobility of the Lost Cause.
B. Southern literati, who had no use for the New Southerners, were willing to make a case for Jeffersonian
agrarianism and against the corporate imperialism of the North.
1. The New Agrarians published a manifesto in 1930, Ill Take My Stand: The South and the Agrarian
Tradition.
2. They urged a reinterpretation of the Civil War, not as a defense of slavery but as a resistance
movement against the evils of industrialism.
3. They reasserted the good life of the agrarian past.
4. They denounced the evils commercialism had brought to the South.
5. The New Agrarians echoed the proslavery arguments against wage-slavery.
6. But the New Agrarians were equally antipathetic to science.
II. Praise of the Old South nevertheless rang hollow in many ears.
A. But the New South was no better, being the inventor of Jim Crow.
1. Jim Crow referred to a variety of Southern state laws that mandated various forms of racial
segregation.
2. It also involved state laws that employed a variety of tricks to strip blacks of the vote.
3. Black attempts to overturn these laws on the basis of the Fourteenth Amendment broke up in the
federal court system.
B. One response to the Old South, the New South, and the white South was offered by Booker T. Washington.
1. Washington was principal of the Tuskegee Institute.
2. Washingtons Atlanta Exposition Address advised blacks to outflank Jim Crow, rather than confront
it politically.
3. Cast down your bucket was Washingtons metaphor for concentrating attention on practical work
and life.
C. In the mind of W. E. B. Du Bois, the real significance of the address was in what Washington seemed to be
telling blacks not to expect: higher education, access to education, political ambition.
1. Du Bois considered racism an offense to be denounced, not a condition to be coped with.
2. Du Bois thought that blacks would never rise at all without the development of what he called a
Talented Tenth, a vanguard of black intellectuals and professionals.
3. Du Bois spread his discontent across the pages of The Souls of Black Folk.
4. African-Americans, wrote Du Bois, live with a double consciousness, of being American on the one
hand yet African on the other.
5. In 1910, the NAACP made Du Bois the editor of its magazine, The Crisis.
6. Du Bois rejected the militant black separatism of Marcus Garvey.
7. But in 1934, Du Bois resigned as editor of The Crisis and toyed with Marxism as a solution.
Essential Reading:
D. L. Lewis, W. E. B. Du Bois.
Supplementary Reading:
E. L. Ayres, The Promise of the New South, chapter 6.
L. R. Harlan, Booker T. Washington, chapters 23.
Questions to Consider:
1. What were the most remarkable literary achievements of the New Agrarians?
2. Are there parallels between the New Agrarians and Du Bois and the New South and Washington?
Scope: The Great Depression traumatized the American psyche and, with the election of Franklin Roosevelt,
brought about a dramatic realignment of American political life. It also turned American intellectuals
decisively against industrial capitalism and even drove a sizable number to embrace communism as an
alternative. Roosevelt, however, courted American intellectuals and deployed their energies, not only into
dealing with the Depression but into winning World War II.
Outline
I. Among the Allied powers in the First World War, only the United States seemed to prosper.
A. Americans used this new prosperity to indulge in an orgy of consumer spending.
1. Consumer goods became staples of the American home.
2. The marks of American exuberance became the cigarette, the short skirt, and jazz.
B. Traditional America attempted to strike back.
1. A national Prohibition Act restricted the legal sale of alcohol.
2. But the restrictions accomplished little.
C. Then, with the onset of the Great Depression, the party ended.
1. The crash of stock values on Wall Street wiped out the profits from the First World War.
2. American unemployment raced to 27 percent by 1932.
3. President Hoover never found an effective way of coping with the Depression.
II. Elected by a landslide in 1932, Franklin Roosevelt destroyed the old Republican coalition of midwestern
farmers and middle-class northeasterners.
A. He mobilized the federal government to intervene directly in the faltering economy.
1. Many of Roosevelts initiatives were actually extensions of Hoovers.
2. But Roosevelt created the public psychology to support them.
3. He asked Americans to treat the Depression as a national emergency that called forth the wartime
virtue of discipline.
B. Roosevelt really did summon into being an army.
1. He created the Civilian Conservation Corps.
2. He signed an Agricultural Adjustment Act to assist farms; a Federal Emergency Relief Act, which
poured federal money into empty state coffers; and a National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), which
suspended some provisions of antitrust laws to enable businesses to hire more workers.
C. In 1929, a new player made its way to the ideological scene, the Communist Party of the United States of
America (CPUSA).
1. It organized more radical unions.
2. It created the popular front, an alliance for writers and artists, such as composer Aaron Copland,
who felt distanced from mainstream American culture.
D. There were also government programs aimed directly at mobilizing the energies of intellectuals.
1. The Works Project Administration (WPA) funded arts projects.
2. The Federal Writers Project hired jobless writers to create living archives of American history.
3. The WPA funded Pare Lorentzs documentaries with music by Virgil Thompson. The documentaries
depicted realistically the problems of Depression-era farmers.
4. Grant Wood, John Steuart Curry, and Thomas Hart Benton created an American Primitive style in art.
III. Why did Herbert Hoover leave all this reform to Franklin Roosevelt to accomplish, when in fact, Hoover was
by far the more talented administrator?
A. Hoover was unable to translate his administrative experience into a full-fledged national mobilization.
1. As a Quaker and by temperament, he was incapable of rallying Americans to a solution as militaristic
as a national mobilization.
Essential Reading:
A. L. Hamby, For the Survival of Democracy, chapters 1, 34, 810.
Supplementary Reading:
T. Fleming, The New Dealers War, chapters 34.
D. M. Kennedy, Freedom from Fear, chapters 3, 12.
Questions to Consider:
1. Why did Herbert Hoover prove so ineffectual in dealing with the Depression?
2. Why did John Dewey err so greatly in counseling nonintervention in World War II?
Scope: The development of the atomic bomb by the Manhattan Project was simultaneously a tremendous public
achievement for American scientists and the origin of a serious moral dilemma, all the more serious
because the culture of American science was built around the conviction that moral dilemmas were
unscientific. Consequently, American scientists were divided not only over the bomb but also over the very
need to ask questions about scientific ethics.
Outline
I. Naturalism was the word most often associated with Deweys version of pragmatism.
A. At Columbia, Deweys circle included Herbert Schneider, John Herman Randall, and Ernst Nagel.
1. Naturalism was contemptuous both of moral philosophy and absolute ethics based on idealism.
2. Naturalism was confident that science offered a value-free methodology for resolving all questions of
right and wrong.
3. By mid-century, anything other than naturalist ethics collapsed into minute analyses of
epistemological distinctions.
B. But not even Dewey could have anticipated what terrible forces science could unleash.
1. Japans attack on Pearl Harbor was made possible by advances in naval aviation made by Japanese
military engineers.
2. German bombers dropped their bombs on undefended cities in 1940 and 1941.
3. The Allies responded by fire-bombing Lubeck, Hamburg, and Dresden.
4. The genocide of 6 million European Jews was hastened by the latest products of the German chemical
giant I.G. Farben.
C. Worse was yet to come from the hands of science.
1. In 1939, Albert Einstein wrote to Franklin Roosevelt about new developments in the fission of
uranium and the possibility of building an atomic bomb.
2. Roosevelt created a Uranium Committee, which became the Manhattan Project.
3. The Manhattan Project had a prototype bomb ready for testing in 1945.
II. It was at this point that the scientists consciences began to bother them.
A. The new president, Harry S. Truman, had been kept in ignorance of the Manhattan Project.
1. He convened an Interim Committee to advise him on the use of the bomb.
2. O. C. Brewster, an engineer who had worked on the Manhattan Project in its early phase, pleaded for
the dropping only of a demonstration bomb.
3. Leo Szilard, a physicist at the University of Chicago, submitted a petition signed by 70 physicists
outlining criteria for how the bomb should be used.
B. Truman decided to drop the bomb and selected four target cities: Hiroshima, Kokura, Nagasaki, and
Niigata.
1. Truman issued a final ultimatum to Japan. When that ultimatum was rejected, Hiroshima was selected
as the target.
2. On August 6, 1945, a B-29 dropped an atomic bomb there, flattening the city and killing 70,000
people.
III. But instead of ending the debate, dropping the bomb only heightened it.
A. Did scientists have a responsibility for the outcomes and uses of their research and work?
1. Percy Williams Bridgman, a professor of mathematics at Harvard, argued that it was unrealistic for
scientists to do more than mind their own professional business.
2. Isidor Isaac Rabi of MIT insisted that the social responsibility of science was to do good science and
publish the results objectively.
3. Physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer warned against laying a perimeter of moral prohibitions around
science.
Essential Reading:
G. Alperovitz, The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb, chapters 3642.
Supplementary Reading:
J. Hershberg, James B. Conant, chapters 814.
M. White and J. Gribben, Einstein, chapter 13.
Questions to Consider:
1. Why was Leo Szilards petition ignored?
2. Do scientists have a duty to consider other questions beyond the strictly scientific?
Scope: Reinhold Niebuhr exposed far more ruthlessly than his conservative counterparts in the 1950s the facile
underpinnings of liberal optimism, and all the more so given that Niebuhr started from Progressive
premises. His skepticism about the moral aspirations of Progressives and debunkers alike came mixed with
an urgency to separate ethics from perfectionism so that it could function in the real world of resistance to
totalitarianism.
Outline
I. Lessons in postwar moral pessimism came largely from a theologian, Reinhold Niebuhr.
A. Niebuhrs father, Gustav Niebuhr, was a minister of the German Evangelical Synod.
1. The Evangelical Synod churches were not dogmatists.
2. Gustavs thinking was a mix of liberal Christianity and agrarian Populism.
B. Niebuhr became a pastor in Detroit in 1915.
1. The Ford Motor Works made Detroit the fourth largest city in America.
2. But to Niebuhr, Henry Ford looked a charlatan.
C. In 1922, Niebuhr began writing articles for The Christian Century, a magazine for Protestant liberals.
1. Niebuhr denied there was a Christian basis to modern industry.
2. This flew in the face of Bruce Bartons The Man Nobody Knows, which portrayed Jesus as a kinder,
gentler version of Henry Ford.
3. By the end of the 1920s, Niebuhr was convinced that no industrialist would ever share power without
being forced to do so.
II. Niebuhr was invited to become associate professor of Christian ethics at Union Theological Seminary in New
York City.
A. There, Niebuhr rediscovered total depravity.
1. Christian ethics can never be fully realized in the course of human history because history is always
the realm of the relative, the shifting, and the changing.
2. History is shot through with moral meaning, but the meaning is never exact.
3. If Christianity had a social mission, it was to illustrate the imperfections of social solutions.
4. Absolutes do not flourish in history because their purpose is to stand outside history.
B. The Great Depression confirmed Niebuhrs dark view of human motivation
1. In 1932, he mounted an assault on optimism with Moral Man and Immoral Society.
2. His primary target was the social pragmatism of John Dewey.
3. Dewey responded in A Common Faith, accusing Niebuhr of thoughtless conservatism.
C. But Niebuhr believed that Dewey had wedded himself to four untenable propositions:
1. That injustice is caused by ignorance and will yield ground to education and greater intelligence.
2. That civilization is becoming more moral, and further appeals to love, justice, good will, and
brotherhood will guarantee the flowering of a good society.
3. That goodness makes for happiness.
4. That wars are stupid and caused only by those who are stupider than far-seeing pacifists.
D. Niebuhr suspected that socialism amounted to little more than impotent theoretical ravings.
1. The willingness of Joseph Stalin to enter into a nonaggression pact with Hitler in 1939 confirmed this
suspicion.
2. Hitlers invasion of the Soviet Union brought the pacifists and socialists suddenly crying for American
intervention, which only enraged Niebuhr more. In 1940, he resigned from the Socialist Party, which
he had joined in 1929.
III. Niebuhr was not hopeful for an easy postwar settlement.
A. Relations between the United States and the Soviet Union began to deteriorate.
Essential Reading:
R. W. Fox, Reinhold Niebuhr, chapters 510.
Supplementary Reading:
W. R. Hutchison, The Modernist Impulse in American Protestantism, chapter 9.
M. Marty, Pilgrims in Their Own Land, chapter 18.
Questions to Consider:
1. What did Niebuhr mean by irony?
2. As a theologian, how is Niebuhr similar to (or different from) Walter Rauschenbusch, Charles Hodge, or
Jonathan Edwards?
Scope: The rise of mass totalitarian regimes in Europe in the 1930s propelled the most important wave of
intellectual immigration to America since the 1840s. But many of the migrs were equally critical of the
near-total grip of commercial culture on American thinking and deplored the vicious conformity that mass
media and mass culture were imposing. The American response was to glorify mass culture and turn it into
an art form, pop art.
Outline
I. In the 1930s, European artists and intellectuals fled from repression to seek the safety of the United States.
A. This exodus began with the artists, but others soon followed.
1. These migr intellectuals had not come willingly and felt little attraction to American life.
2. They were usually indifferent to religion.
3. They were critical of Americas free-wheeling capitalism.
4. Their challenge was to find a way to express their repugnance to American culture without attacking
the American democracy that had saved them.
B. The first great migr critic of mass culture was Eric Fromm.
1. Fromm liked to mix psychoanalysis with cultural criticism.
2. He wrote that people shrink from freedom and escape into authoritarianism, destruction, and
conformity.
3. Americans lived under conformity, the weapon of matured capitalism.
4. Americans acquiesced passively to a cultural regime empty of content.
5. Television was the embodiment of everything Fromm and the migrs condemned in American
culture.
C. Herbert Marcuse blended Marx and Freud in a critique of American mass culture.
1. In Eros and Civilization, Marcuse warned that television was inducing a premature maturity in the
children who watched it.
2. Modern capitalist society induced a pseudo-maturity in which rebellion is rendered impermissible.
II. But mass culture refused to accept this critique and politely wither under its exposure.
A. Instead, the 1950s gave birth to pop art.
1. Pop art championed the glitzy, the cheap, and the commercial.
2. The term was invented by Lawrence Alloway, a British-born art critic.
B. Pop art soon came to mean three things:
1. It glorified mechanization.
2. It embraced expendability.
3. It celebrated sheer riotous visual abundance.
C. The most sensational of the pop artists was Andy Warhol.
1. Warhol started as a commercial advertiser but became a pop artist in 1960, when he painted his first
comic-strip images for a window display.
2. In 1962, he began creating the prints that made him famous: 32 Campbell Soup Cans, Marilyn, Jackie.
3. After a stalker nearly ended his life in 1968, his energy faded, as did interest in pop art.
D. The question pop art could not answer was why anyone should bother to buy it.
1. Possibly, pop art was an exercise in satire.
2. Pop art practitioners made it impossible to look with contempt on mass culture in the way Marcuse and
Fromm did.
3. But pop art achieved this by confirming the migrs suspicions of mass culture.
Essential Reading:
M. Kammen, American Culture, American Tastes.
Questions to Consider:
1. In what way did Erich Fromm believe Americans escaped from freedom?
2. Was pop art a confirmation or a rebuttal of the migr intellectuals criticism of American culture?
Scope: The disillusionment of W. E. B. Du Bois, the impermanence of the Harlem Renaissance, and the
persistence of segregation left black intellectuals looking for radical solutions, either in expatriation or in
bizarre religious cult movements. It was a mainstream religious figure, Martin Luther King, who guided
the black struggle for civil rights back onto the path of integration into American society and culture.
Outline
I. Black Americans still believed Du Bois original goal of binding the experience of being black and American
into a new Black American.
A. A Harlem Renaissance was built around black writers in the newly integrated upper Manhattan suburb of
Harlem.
1. The Harlem Renaissance was composed of exactly the Talented Tenth that Du Bois had hoped for.
2. It included James Weldon Johnson, Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, Jean Toomer,
Carl Van Vechten, Alain Locke, and Zora Neale Hurston.
3. The greatest collective achievement of the Harlem Renaissance occurred with the anthology The New
Negro in 1924.
B. But the Great Depression flattened and scattered the Harlem writers.
1. James Weldon Johnson died in an auto accident in 1938.
2. Zora Neale Hurston was reduced to working as a maid in Florida.
3. Countee Cullen, who had married Du Bois daughter, taught French at a Harlem middle school.
II. Thereafter, black writers followed Du Bois rejection of an integrated society.
A. James Baldwin was directly connected to the Harlem Renaissance because he was one of Cullens students.
1. He was terrorized by his stepfather and by white racial humiliation.
2. Baldwin became an expatriate and published Notes of a Native Son (1955), Go Tell It on the Mountain
(1953), and Giovannis Room (1956) in Europe.
3. But he was unable to blend into European life.
4. Baldwin believed that what American blacks needed was a righteous prophet.
B. Baldwin thought he had found this prophet in Elijah Muhammad.
1. Elijah Muhammad was born Elijah Poole in Georgia in 1897.
2. He came under the spell of Wallace D. Fard, the first prophet of the Nation of Islam.
3. In Fards cosmology, American blacks were the descendants of the Tribe of Shabazz.
4. Whites came into existence as the result of an experiment by a corrupt scientist, Yacub.
5. When Fard disappeared in 1934, Poole assumed leadership of the Nation of Islam and renamed
himself Elijah Muhammad.
III. A far better claim to being a righteous prophet was held by Martin Luther King.
A. Kings youth had none of the shades thrown over it that Baldwins had.
1. He went to Morehouse College, an all-black college in Atlanta.
2. He studied at Crozier Theological Seminary and Boston University.
B. Kings first intellectual love was Walter Rauschenbusch.
1. From Rauschenbusch, King learned that any valid religious commitment had to incorporate a concern
for the social welfare of people.
2. But King eventually found Rauschenbusch lacking in hard-headedness.
C. That skepticism led King next to Reinhold Niebuhr, then to Mohandas Gandhi.
1. Niebuhr thought that Gandhi had merely been lucky in his enemies.
2. King revolted at Niebuhrs attempt to reduce nonviolent resistance and violent resistance to the same
moral level.
D. In April 1954, King became pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama.
Essential Reading:
C. Carson, ed., The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr., chapters 114.
Supplementary Reading:
C. Carson, et al., eds., The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader.
D. Howard-Pitney, ed., Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and the Civil Rights Struggle of the 1950s and 1960s.
Questions to Consider:
1. In what ways did the Nation of Islam reject, and accommodate, white society?
2. Is Americas struggle with race still a racial conflict or a class conflict?
Scope: World War II looked like a triumph over fascism but not necessarily in favor of liberal democracy.
American intellectuals, scarred by the Depression era, together with a new postwar generation of college-
attendees who were influenced by the criticisms of the migr intellectuals, were radicalized into a New
Left by the Vietnam War. But the New Lefts agenda for an ill-defined revolution in American affairs
wilted in the face of government hostility and general indifference.
Outline
I. For Americans, the Second World War looked like a victory for liberal democracy.
A. But the rejoicing had to be shared with the Soviet Union.
1. Europeans interpreted the war as a rescue performed by Marxist socialism.
2. Truman was advised that the American armies were too weak to challenge the Soviet armies.
B. Within the United States, voices were raised in defense of the Soviets.
1. Henry Wallace, Trumans secretary of agriculture, urged Truman to cooperate with the Soviets.
2. Roosevelts deputy treasury secretary, Harry Dexter White, and atomic scientists Klaus Fuchs and
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg passed American secrets to the Soviets.
3. The rationale for cooperating with the Soviets was a political one.
II. Skepticism about liberal democracy could also be found in the American universities.
A. From the 1890s onward, college was where Americans were fitted for places in the American economy.
1. The priorities in education shifted to the secular and the commercial.
2. In 1919, Harvard students volunteered to help break the Boston police strike.
B. Two factors altered the complacency of American colleges and universities.
1. The migr intellectuals of the 1930s who were snapped up for university faculties felt alienated from
American life.
2. The Servicemens Readjustment Act of 1944 (or the G.I. Bill), set off a stampede into the American
college and university system.
3. As an undergraduate degree became the middle classs key of promise, the faculties were undergoing
significant political radicalization.
C. The consensus among the migr Marxists was that Marxism was wasted on the American working class.
1. The American worker was too sated with the cornucopia of goods.
2. The revolution would have to be made by an intellectual vanguard of students.
D. American intellectuals were already discovering that the corporation and the suburb could be stultifying.
1. Sloan Wilsons The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956) described the restlessness of a corporate
manikin.
2. Betty Friedan extended this portrait to the woman in the suburbs in her book The Feminine Mystique.
3. Sociologist C. Wright Mills described corporate life as a narcotic administered by the Power Elite.
III. To undergraduates mentored by an alienated faculty, the university had become a service station for the
Establishment.
A. This came to a confrontation in September 1964.
1. Berkeley students tried to stage a sympathy demonstration for the Civil Rights Movement.
2. Mario Savo turned the demonstrations into the Free Speech Movement.
B. The banner of the student revolutionaries was the Port Huron Statement.
1. The Vietnam War gave them a catalyzing issue.
2. The New Left made common cause with the broader student resistance to the war.
C. But a different way of responding was to disengage, rather than engage.
1. This path was popularized by Aldous Huxleys Brave New World.
2. Timothy Leary promoted experiments with hallucinogenic drugs.
Essential Reading:
N. Friedman, Fifty-Year War, chapters 14, 2830.
Supplementary Reading:
V. Gosse, ed., The Movements of the New Left, 19501975: A Brief History with Documents.
J. E. Haynes and H. Klehr, In Denial: Historians, Communism and Sabotage, chapter 4.
Questions to Consider:
1. What fundamental strategy distinguished the New Left from the Old Left?
2. What caused the collapse of the New Left in the 1970s?
Scope: From the Progressives onward, it was the American Left that set the direction of most of American social
change, and little in the way of a coherent conservative political philosophy stood in its path. Once again, it
was the migr intellectualsthis time, those frightened by the specter of totalitarianism and the fragility
of liberalismwho erected the philosophical scaffolding for American conservatism. It was a composite
movement, combining elements of religious dissent and secular liberalism, but it offered a viable
intellectual alternative for Americans who remained fundamentally loyal to the liberalism of the Founders.
Outline
I. The American Left gained tremendous ground between the Gilded Age and the Second World War.
A. However, most of the movements were bitterly critical of each other.
1. The leadership had generated little enthusiasm among working-class and middle-class Americans.
2. The few leaders with working-class origins were marginalized by the Lefts elites.
B. Americans voted for Progressive candidates as a means for ensuring their chance for mobility and
betterment.
1. The Left scored its biggest political gains when it advertised its policies as the best method for
ensuring individual prosperity.
2. This made it difficult for the critics of the Left to organize themselves as a genuine opposition party.
II. There was no American version of conservatism until after 1945.
A. Its origins were also linked to the arrival of the migr intellectuals.
1. For the Middle European migrs, the Versailles Treaty was a symbol of the disasters that followed
from well-intentioned idealists.
2. Friedrich Hayek insisted that social and economic planning was the lethal enemy of democracy.
B. Leo Strauss, the most obscure of the conservative migrs, formulated five axioms for the preservation of
democracy:
1. Inequality and freedom cannot be avoided.
2. Attempts to reduce inequality will necessarily reduce freedom.
3. Freedom cannot survive if it is defined only as the freedom to accumulate material possessions.
4. Politics must be linked to the cultivation of virtue, whether philosophical or religious.
5. The best government is based on prudence, moderation, and reason.
C. The migrs found allies in America in three places.
1. Former American communists who had turned away from socialism (Max Eastman, James Burnham,
Whittaker Chambers).
2. Traditionalist Roman Catholics who admired Edmund Burke (Russell Kirk, William F. Buckley).
3. Southern agrarians who also resented the ease with which they were made the sport of the Left
(Richard Weaver).
III. Translating this into practical politics and successful legislation was a more difficult project.
A. Both the Catholics and the Straussians at first had little taste for politics.
1. Much of what passed for conservative politics was Populist anticommunism (the John Birch Society).
2. The low point of Populist anticommunism arrived when Barry Goldwater ran a presidential campaign
on a radical anticommunist message.
B. But in 1980, Jimmy Carter was heaved from office by Ronald Reagan, the first conservative president.
1. Reagan marked the recruitment of ex-liberals and working-class Protestants.
2. The Left found it difficult to understand why working-class Americans would vote on the basis of
culture rather than economics.
3. But the five Republican electoral victories between 1980 and 2004 breathed life into the conservative
intellectual movement.
4. The Reagan administration turned to the pupils of Strauss and Hayek to staff its offices.
Essential Reading:
G. Hodgson, The World Turned Right Side Up, chapters 2, 5, 1011.
Supplementary Reading:
D. T. Carter, The Politics of Rage, chapter 7.
I. Kristol, Neo-Conservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea, chapters 1, 24, 3133, 39.
Questions to Consider:
1. What was the significance of the election of Ronald Reagan as president in 1980?
2. Why did Leo Strauss fear for the future of democracy?
Abolitionist: An advocate of the immediate abolition of slavery, a position best illustrated in William Lloyd
Garrison.
Agrarian: Term applied to the view that land and agriculture are the only true sources of wealth and that a society
based on agriculture is socially and morally superior to one based on industrial capitalism.
Analogy: A method that discovered lawlike order in human consciousness by extrapolating from observations of
lawlike behavior in physical nature.
Anthropology: The study of the technological, cultural, and social patterns of human life. Pioneered by Franz Boas
and popularized through the work of Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead.
Behaviorism: A form of psychology that asserts that actual behavior is the only legitimate object of psychological
study and that behavior modification is to be achieved through the manipulation and conditioning of responses.
Calvinism: A school of Protestant Christian theology that stresses the absolute sovereignty of God and the
dependence of human will on Gods prior decree.
Capitalism: A set of economic and social relations in which one class owns the means of production and another
class provides the labor, with (a) profit for the first class coming from the surplus value it is able to charge over and
above the wages of the laborers and (b) the profit being turned into investment in more production or capital.
Common sense: Concept developed by Thomas Reid and Francis Hutcheson, who argued that human moral
judgments were made instinctively and uniformly or commonly.
Deism: A generalized belief in a creator who superintends human events only generally and according to natural
law.
Enlightenment: An intellectual event that set aside traditional religious and philosophical authority in preference
for empirical observation and criticism of conventional social and political arrangements and that advocated reliance
on the adequacy of human reason for the solution of problems. Often associated with the promotion of natural law,
liberalism, and republicanism (q.v.).
Epistemology: General philosophical term for theories about how minds know things.
Great Awakening: A large-scale religious revival, lasting from 17391741. Its most prominent figure was George
Whitefield.
Half-Way Covenant: Adopted in 1662 by a general synod of church representatives from the Puritan churches of
Massachusetts Bay, the Half-Way Covenant was a compromise position on the question of who was entitled to
admission to communion and baptism in the Congregational churches of the Bay Colony. With the waning of active
piety in Massachusetts society, the 1662 synod decided to permit the baptism of the children of colonists who did
not qualify for full church membership but to deny them access to communion. This compromise was denounced by
Jonathan Edwards, who wished to return to the more demanding piety of the full-membership requirements in the
1740s. The term was first invented in 1790 by Edwardss pupil, Joseph Bellamy.
Idealism: Philosophical doctrine that minds know only ideas and have no reliable access to objects in an external
world.
Immaterialism: A form of idealism that argues that all existence and causality consist of the mind of God, the finite
minds he has created, and the ideas God imparts to them.
Irony: An attitude of observation that stresses the failure of human intentions to produce the results they expect; as
promoted by Reinhold Niebuhr, it encouraged an attitude of realistic humility about social reform and the
aspirations of American foreign policy.
Liberalism: Term originally applied to opponents of the monarchy who urged the restructuring of society by reason
and civic morality rather than by inherited tradition or religious authority. Economic liberalism was identified in the
19th century with free trade, free markets, and social mobility, but liberalism was more often used in the 20th century
to describe a cultural position of permissiveness, dissent from religious orthodoxy, and moderate Left politics.
Henry Adams (18381918). Great-grandson of John Adams (third president of the United States). Graduated from
Harvard College (1858) and served as secretary to his father, Charles Francis Adams, while the latter was American
minister to Great Britain during the Civil War. Joined the history department at Harvard (18701877). Caustic critic
of the Gilded Age. Wrote History of the United States (18891891), Mont-Saint Michel and Chartres (1904), and
The Education of Henry Adams (1907).
Edward Bellamy (18501898). Journalist and writer. Wrote the quasi-socialist utopian novel, Looking Backward
(1887), predicting a hopeful resolution of the social question of labor and capitalism.
Ruth Benedict (18871948). Anthropologist. Graduated from Vassar College (1909) and studied anthropology
under Franz Boas at Columbia University, where she earned a Ph.D. in 1923. She taught at Columbia from
19281948. Her 1934 book, Patterns of Culture, shaped the development of anthropology as a discipline.
Horace Bushnell (18021876). Congregational clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Yale College (1827)
and was ordained pastor of North Church, Hartford, Connecticut. Published Christian Nurture (1847) and God in
Christ (1849), which introduced Romantic theories of language to Protestant theology.
Eugene V. Debs (18551926). Socialist and labor advocate, he was president of the American Railway Union
during the Pullman strike of 1894. Ran as the Socialist candidate for president in 19001912 and again in 1920.
Jailed during World War I by the Wilson administration for advocating resistance to the draft.
John Dewey (18591952). Philosopher and educator. Graduated from the University of Vermont (1879) and Johns
Hopkins University (Ph.D., 1888). Taught at the University of Michigan and University of Chicago, where he
invented a social version of pragmatism and applied it through the founding of the Laboratory School. Moved to
Columbia University in 1904 and became an advocate for pragmatic reconstruction of philosophy.
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (18681963). Journalist, educator, and activist. Graduated from Fisk
University (1888) and Harvard College (1890). Editor of The Crisis (19101934) and author of the most important
articulation of black American racial consciousness, The Souls of Black Folk (1903).
Jonathan Edwards (17031758). Congregational clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Yale College (1720)
and called as pastor of the church of Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1729. Promoted awakenings in 17341735
and 17391741, which he described and defended in A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God (1737).
Wrote philosophical defenses of Calvinist theology in Freedom of the Will (1754) and Original Sin (1758). Briefly
president of Princeton (17571758).
Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882). Unitarian clergyman and author. Graduated from Harvard College (1822)
and served as minister of the Second Church, Boston (18291832). Wrote Nature (1836) as an American Romantic
declaration. Delivered The American Scholar (1837) as a call for an intellectual break with Europe and the
Divinity School Address (at Harvard) in 1838 as a repudiation of traditional Unitarian theology.
Henry George (18391897). Laborer, journalist, and economist. Wrote Progress and Poverty (1879) to propose a
single-tax solution for redistributing industrial wealth.
Charles Hodge (17971878). Presbyterian clergyman and theologian. Graduated from Princeton (1819) and
became second professor (with Archibald Alexander) at Princeton Theological Seminary. His Systematic Theology
(1873) was a landmark of conservative Protestant thought and represented the incorporation of Scottish common
sense moral philosophy into American theology.
William James (18421910). Philosopher and psychologist. Graduated from Harvard Medical School (1868) and
joined the faculty of Harvard in 1870, where he established the first psychology laboratory. His Principles of
Psychology (1890) was a major force in overthrowing faculty psychology, but he was even better known for
formulating a philosophy of pragmatism in his Lowell Lectures, Pragmatism (1908).
Martin Luther King (19291968). Baptist theologian and civil rights activist. Graduated from Morehouse College
(1948) and Boston University (Ph.D., 1955). Became pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery,
Alabama, in 1954 and assumed leadership of the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955. Eventually became the most
prominent spokesman for black civil rights in the nation.
Primary Sources:
Ahlstrom, Sydney, ed. Theology in America: The Major Protestant Voices from Puritanism to Neo-Orthodoxy.
Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. An outstanding collection from the most influential writings of Edwards,
Bushnell, Nevin, Rauschenbusch, Royce, James, and Niebuhr.
Ames, William. The Marrow of Theology, Translated by J. Eusden. Durham, NC: Labyrinth, 1983. An outstanding
translation of Amess principal theological survey.
Basler, R. P, ed. Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1953. The
standard edition of Lincolns writings, from the great state papers down to the smallest notes.
Blau, Joseph L., ed. American Philosophic Addresses, 17001900. New York: Columbia University Press, 1946.
An anthology of important philosophical orations, including those of Emerson, Wayland, Henry James, Sr.,
Edwards, and Bushnell; organized topically around philosophies of culture, science, and religion.
Bushman, Richard L., ed. The Great Awakening: Documents on the Revival of Religion, 17401745. New York:
Norton, 1970. Differs from the Miller-Heimert anthology by assembling shorter piecesextracts from letters and
newspaper accountsillustrating the immediate impact of the Awakening.
Carey, George W., and James McClellan, eds. The Federalist. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2001. The best edition of
the famous defense of the Constitution by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, keyed to portions of
the Constitution under discussion in the articles.
Carson, Clayborne, ed. The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. New York: Warner Books, 1998. An
assembled autobiography, collected from various autobiographical fragments of Kings.
, et al., eds. The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader: Documents, Speeches and First-Hand Accounts from
the Black Freedom Struggle. New York: Penguin, 1991. A substantial anthology of short writings and reports from
the Civil Rights Movement, illuminating its history and conflicts.
Gosse, Van, ed. The Movements of the New Left, 1950-1975: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: St. Martins,
2005. Collects the most important radical manifestoes of the New Left, including the Port Huron Statement.
Hamilton, Alexander. Writings. Edited by Joanne B. Freeman. New York: Library of America, 2001. A useful one-
volume collection of Hamiltons major writings; in the Library of America series.
Howard-Pitney, David, ed. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and the Civil Rights Struggle of the 1950s and
1960s: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: St. Martins, 2004. A short but useful collection of key documents
from the Civil Rights Movement.
Hutchison, William R., ed. American Protestant Thought: The Liberal Era. New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1968.
A short anthology of Protestant liberal theology from Charles Briggs and Walter Rauschenbusch to the 1960s.
Hyneman, C. S., and D. S. Lutz , eds. American Political Writing during the Founding Era, 17601805.
Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1983. A two-volume compilation of texts on the American founding from the lesser-
known but influential writers of the period.
Jensen, Merrill, ed. Tracts of the American Revolution, 17631776. Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. An
anthology of the most prominent and influential pamphlets agitating for American independence, including
Jeffersons Summary View of the Rights of British America.
Kimnach, W. H., K. Minkema, and D. Sweeney, eds. The Sermons of Jonathan Edwards: A Reader. New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1999. A one-volume sampler of Edwardss best-known sermons, from the larger Works of
Jonathan Edwards project at Yale.
Kuklick, Bruce, ed. William James: Writings, 18781899 and 19021910. New York: Library of America, 1987.
The best short collection of Jamess later writings, including generous selections from The Varieties of Religious
Experience, The Will to Believe, The Principles of Psychology, and Pragmatism; in the Library of America series.
Miller, Perry, and Alan Heimert, eds. The Great Awakening. Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 1967. A collection of 53
important documents from the Awakening, including pieces by Edwards and Whitefield, concentrating mainly on
New England and the middle colonies.