The Reopening of the American Mind: On Skepticism and ConstitutionalismRodopi, 1998 - 274 pages The Reopening of the American Mind: On Skepticism and Constitutionalism explores the connection of moderate skepticism with attachment to constitutionalism through the thought of five writers. The features of this skepticism were concisely delineated by James Madison in the 37th Federalist as a recognition of the complexity of political matters, the limitations of human reason, and the shortcomings of language. The position was first articulated by Cicero who connected it with the idea of a mixed or republican constitution developed by trial and error over generations. Cicero was influential in the world of David Hume, Edmund Burke, and Madison. The skeptical/constitutional connection found its most articulate recent advocate in Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter and underlay his advocacy of judicial restraint. Current events have revived interest in the primacy of the legislative branch in balancing interests and rights, in the States as laboratories for democracy, and in an experimental approach to the solution of social problems in what might be called a reopening of the American mind. The five central chapters explore the skeptical/constitutional connection and the spirit of moderation in these political thinkers. Without an appreciation of this tradition of avoiding dogmatism, people will continue to demand simple answers to complex problems. The book is not, however, primarily a tract for the times but a reflection on the on-going search for a more civil world. |
Contents
11 | |
11 | |
14 | |
12 | 33 |
CICERO AND THE ORIGINS OF SKEPTICISM | 52 |
Other Works | 89 |
HUME | 95 |
BURKE | 111 |
The Harvard Publications and Their Applications | 159 |
The Flag Salute Cases | 175 |
Democracy | 184 |
Legal Reasoning | 191 |
Due Process | 201 |
Exemplars | 207 |
Conclusion | 216 |
Bibliographical and Critical Appendix | 218 |
The Grounding and Growth of Principles | 121 |
Reason in Sickness and in Health | 132 |
FELIX FRANKFURTER | 135 |
The Status of Frankfurter | 139 |
Biographical Sketch | 142 |
The Canonical Figures | 151 |
POSTSCRIPTS | 221 |
NOTES | 231 |
251 | |
ABOUT THE AUTHOR | 267 |
269 | |
Other editions - View all
The Reopening of the American Mind: On Skepticism and Constitutionalism James W. Vice Limited preview - 2021 |
The Reopening of the American Mind: On Skepticism and Constitutionalism James W. Vice Limited preview - 1998 |
Common terms and phrases
academic skepticism Academica action Alexis de Tocqueville American appear argument Aristotle asserted biography Brandeis Burke's Carneades Cato century character Chicago Press choice Cicero common concern Constitution David Hume democracy developed dialogue discussion distinction doctrines Due Process Clause Edmund Burke essay experience F.A. Hayek facts Federalist Felix Frankfurter follow Frankfurter's freedom Greek Harvard Hayek Holmes Hugo Black human nature Hume's ideas important individual institutions interest interpretation issues judge judgment judicial Justice Laelius legislation Leo Strauss liberty logic Lucullus Madison matter means ment opinion participants person philosophy Plato political popular position practical principles problems Pyrrhonic question quoted reason recognize Republic responsibility role Roman Rome Roosevelt rule says Scipio sense simply social society Stoic Supreme Court theory things thought tion Tocqueville tradition truth understanding University of Chicago University Press Varro wisdom Wittgenstein words writings York