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Naive readings: reveilles political and philosophic - 55423

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One sure fact of humanity is that we all cherish our opinions and will often strongly resist efforts by others to change them.

Philosophers and politicians have long understood this, and whenever they have sought to get us to think differently they have often resorted to forms of camouflage that slip their unsettling thoughts into our psyche without raising alarm.

In this fascinating examination of a range of writers and thinkers, Ralph Lerner offers a new method of reading that detects this camouflage and offers a way toward deeper understandings of some of history's most important-and most concealed-messages.           Lerner analyzes an astonishing diversity of writers, including Francis Bacon, Benjamin Franklin, Edward Gibbon, Judah Halevi, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Moses Maimonides, and Alexis de Tocqueville.

He shows that by reading their words slowly and navely, with wide-open eyes and special attention for moments of writing that become self-conscious, impassioned, or idiosyncratic, we can begin to see a pattern that illuminates a thinker's intent, new messages purposively executed through indirect means.

Through these experimental readings, Lerner shows, we can see a deep commonality across writers from disparate times and situations, one that finds them artfully challenging others to reject passivity and fatalism and start thinking afresh.    

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
022635332X / 9780226353326
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
190
14/04/2016
English
223 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Previously issued in print: 2016 Description based on online resource; title from home page (viewed on August 12, 2016).