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The Significance of The Review of Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

During the past fourteen years, since the entry of the United States into the Second World War, and especially since the end of the war (with its disillusioning peace blending into the so-called cold war), the United States has had thrust upon it the problems of the overwhelming difficulties of world leadership. Leadership in the true sense of the word cannot be totalitarian or authoritarian. It must be intellectual, moral and spiritual. This our leading statesmen have sometimes recognized, though not, I am inclined to think, often enough. In any event, it is in these spheres that our peoples have been perhaps the least prepared for our mission. Even in the natural sciences, one of the principal creative sources of American leadership has been individual scientists—such as Einstein, Fermi and Teller—bom and trained in Europe, who found asylum in the United States from Nazi or Fascist tyranny. In so far as the creative mind and its place in the national life are concerned, our main weakness has not been, however, in the natural sciences. During the first half of the twentieth century in the United States these have become distinguished in their own right. When it comes to the practical application of science we have led the world. In no other country have the results of new scientific knowledge been utilized technologically to produce as high a standard of living, measured in material quantity, as in the United States.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1955

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References

1 His monumental book on Spain in the Enlightenment is an important contribution to the knowledge of the modern world's heritage from the period of the American and French Revolutions, and a grasp of this heritage is a necessary preparation for the tasks of the creative mind today, as these are envisaged in this article (Sarrailh, Jean, L'Espagne edtarie de la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siecle. Paris: C. Klincksieck, 1954).Google Scholar

2 Siegried, André, Tableau des États Unis. (Paris: A. Colin, 1954) pp. 340–43Google Scholar. An American translation of this book is now being published by Harcourt, Brace under the title, America at Mid-Century.

3 “The University of Chicago and the World, 1925–1951,” The Review of Politics, vol. XIII, no. 4 (1951), pp. 399429.Google Scholar

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6 Varagnac, André, De la préhistoire au monde moderne, (ParisPlon, 1954), see esp. pp. 217–19, 232–33Google Scholar; Nef, John U., La Naissetnce de la civilisation industrielle et le monde contemporain, (Paris, A. Colin, 1954), see esp. chaps. ix, x, xi, pp. 248–49.Google Scholar