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Navigator, November, 2003

Navigator, November, 2003
Articles
The Party of Modernity
David Kelley
(11/1/2003)
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Commentaries
The Battle for Toleration--and Its Betrayal
Roger Donway
(11/1/2003)
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Reviews
One Hundred Film Classics
Robert James Bidinotto (11/1/2003)
The Ten Best Films--Objectively Speaking
Robert James Bidinotto (11/1/2003)
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News
Arrivals and Departures at TOC
Laura Baratta departs and Linda Bloomer and David Shetterly arrive.
David Kelley, Stephen Hicks, and Michael Newberry Addresses Conference of New Art Foundation
The inaugural conference of the Foundation for the Advancement of Art, the mission of the organization is "to establish innovative representationalism as the alternative to postmodern art in the world's leading contemporary art museums."
Ed Hudgins Visits East-Central Europe
Edward Hudgins visited Prague in the Czech Republic, Vienna in Austria, and Budapest in Hungary on a trip sponsored by the Center for First Principles and by several businesses.
Explore the TOC Web Site
The TOC web site and what it has to offer.
Sightings, November 2003
We the Living released to theaters across North America; Robert James Bidinotto's ecoNot.com with slogan "Individualism, not Environmentalism".
Soundings, November 2003
Fighting corruption, Wordwatchers Corner, Lawyers fighting for welfare rights, Polls about beliefs show cultural split.
» More Center News…

Letters
Letters: Can there be an 'After Socialism'?
  (11/1/2003)
Letters: How Chile Was Saved
  (11/1/2003)


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Suggested Readings: Modernity

The Empire of ReasonThe Empire of Reason: How Europe Imagined and America Realized the Enlightenment
By Henry Steele Commager
ISBN: 0-385-12003-6

"In The Empire of Reason, Professor Commager succeeds in showing how the idea of liberty became the blessings of liberty. He goes far beyond political notions, touching the naturalists, scientists, and artists of every kind who contributed to the new nation. Defining the dream, he rediscovers the roots of revolution."
— The New York Times



The Lunar MenThe Lunar Men: Five Friends Whose Curiosity Changed the World
By Jenny Uglow
ISBN: 0-374-19440-8

The Lunar Men is a grand story—imagine a kind of historical version of Atlas Shrugged set in 18th-century England . . . Of course, here James Watt, with the help of the industrialist Boulton, starts, rather than stops, the engine of the world. Like Rand's heroes, these over-reachers—several of whom began their careers as boy apprentices—were not merely gifted, they were determined and indefatigable.
—Michael Dirda, The Washington Post



The Lost World of Thomas JeffersonThe Lost World of Thomas Jefferson
By Daniel J. Boorstin
ISBN: 0-226-06496-4

"The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson is not an account of Jeffersonian political philosophy, but of something which has received less attention: the view of the world which underlay it and which has survived to condition a great many other aspects of American life and thought. . . . It is a major contribution not only to Jefferson studies but to American intellectual history.
— Richard Hofstadter, South Atlantic Monthly



The Portable Enlightenment ReaderThe Portable Enlightenment Reader
Edited by Isaac Kramnick
ISBN: 0-14-02-4566-9

"In championing radical ideas, such as individual liberty and an empirical appraisal of the universe through rational inquiry and natural experience, Enlightenment philosophers in Europe and America planted the seeds for modern liberalism, cultural humanism, science and technology, and laissez-faire capitalism. This volume brings together the era's classic works, with more than a hundred selections from a broad range of sources."
—Publisher's description




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