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Our Captain, Kirk.


Looking back on past triumphs is a good thing, especially during times of uncertainty and jolting change. At a time of recession, terrorism, and the fearful realities of war, glancing back a half-century seems to take one back to a time that now seems colorless and tame. Weren't the 1950s the age of "the man in the gray flannel suit," a time when the mood of the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  was by and large conservative -- perhaps excessively so?

As Russell Kirk Russell Kirk (19 October 1918 – 29 April1994) was an American political theorist, historian, social critic, and man of letters, best known for his influence on 20th century American conservatism.  would say: nay, not so. In the 1950s, liberal statism stat·ism  
n.
The practice or doctrine of giving a centralized government control over economic planning and policy.



statist adj.
 bestrode be·stride  
tr.v. be·strode , be·strid·den , be·strid·ing, be·strides
1. To sit or stand on with the legs astride; straddle.

2.
 the nation like a colossus Colossus - (A huge and ancient statue on the Greek island of Rhodes).

1. The Colossus and Colossus Mark II computers used by Alan Turing at Bletchley Park, UK during the Second World War to crack the "Tunny" cipher produced by the Lorenz SZ 40 and SZ 42 machines.
, triumphant and in command of the foreseeable future, and conservatism was struggling into existence. While many Americans possessed a commonsensical, Reader's Digest Reader's Digest

U.S.-based monthly magazine. Founded by DeWitt and Lila Wallace, it was first published in 1922 as a digest of articles of topical interest and entertainment value condensed from other periodicals.
 form of gut-level conservatism, they were voiceless. In the public sphere The public sphere is a concept in continental philosophy and critical theory that contrasts with the private sphere, and is the part of life in which one is interacting with others and with society at large. , conservative writings were widely mocked as wellsprings of bigotry and antiquarian an·ti·quar·i·an  
n.
One who studies, collects, or deals in antiquities.

adj.
1. Of or relating to antiquarians or to the study or collecting of antiquities.

2. Dealing in or having to do with old or rare books.
 fanaticism Fanaticism
See also Extremism.

Adamites

various sects preaching a return to life before the fall. [Christian Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 8]

assassins

Moslem murder teams used hashish as stimulus (11th and 12th centuries).
.

Such charges are still leveled, but they sound increasingly shrill, hollow, and silly. What a difference 50 years can make -- and in the history of the postwar conservative movement, the early years of that half-century spelled the difference between living and languishing lan·guish  
intr.v. lan·guished, lan·guish·ing, lan·guish·es
1. To be or become weak or feeble; lose strength or vigor.

2.
. "Incredible as it may seem, in 1950 the great intellectual tradition properly described as 'conservative' had no recognized interpreter or spokesman," wrote former National Review publisher William Rusher. "That omission was brilliantly rectified in 1953 by the publication of Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind. In this and subsequent books, Kirk revived the basic principles of conservatism, in particular as laid down by Edmund Burke, and applied them to modern America. Within five years, together with the principles of free-market economics, they had become the warp and woof warp and woof
n.
The underlying structure on which something is built; a base or foundation: "profound dislocations throughout the entire warp and woof of the American economy" David A.
 of conservatism as we know it today."

That's quite a claim, but it is true: The year 1950 indeed saw no hope for the rise of anything resembling a movement among the ranks of America's anti-Communists, traditionalists, and libertarians. But over the next three years, three books appeared that drew together the scattered men and women of the Right and helped forge it into a living political force: William F. Buckley Jr.'s God and Man at Yale (1951), Whittaker Chambers's Witness (1952), and Kirk's great work.

In The Conservative Mind, Kirk -- who contributed a regular column to NR for 25 years and was described by Buckley as "this terribly mature, polished, knowledgeable student of American and European history" -- outlined the principles and key figures in the Anglo-American tradition "from Burke to Santayana" (the book's subtitle, changed in later editions to "from Burke to Eliot"). In doing so, he gave the modern conservative movement its pedigree and much of its definition.

But The Conservative Mind is much more than an artifact to be revered. It is a document that still speaks in ringing tones today, thanks chiefly to its author's articulate reminders that man is much more than a political and economic creature; he is also a spiritual being, who seeks meaning and purpose that cannot be found in wealth and comfort alone. He is a being in need of wise traditions and a sense of rootedness, what George Santayana George Santayana (December 16, 1863, Madrid – September 26, 1952, Rome), was a philosopher, essayist, poet, and novelist.

A lifelong Spanish citizen, Santayana was raised and educated in the United States, invariably wrote in English, and is considered an American man
 termed "the old faiths, the old governments, the old economies, the old buildings, the old loves and loyalties." Man, despite his bent toward error and sin, is beloved by his Creator and meant for eternity. He is a player in the drama of history and part of a community of souls, formed in character by his forebears and a shaper of generations yet to come.

Kirk wrote that when man lacks an object of allegiance, a body of tradition to give context to his life, and small, voluntary communities of family and neighbors, he ends up in the clutches of boredom and aimlessness aim·less  
adj.
Devoid of direction or purpose.



aimless·ly adv.

aim
, and the society of which he is a part slides into decadence. Therefore the great test of the modern conservative is not how to make the economy start humming again -- laudable though that goal is -- but to restore "a living faith to the lonely crowd, how to remind men that life has ends," making for order in the soul and order in the commonwealth.

Thus the high value of The Conservative Mind lies in its power to remind the reader of what Kirk (after Eliot) called "the permanent things" -- timeless, normative truths, such as the rightness of honor, courage, and mercy, and the importance of high character. "In essence," wrote Kirk, "the body of belief that we call 'conservatism' is an affirmation of normality in the concerns of society." He added, "There exist standards to which we may repair; man is not perfectible, but he may achieve a tolerable degree of order, justice, and freedom; both the 'human sciences' and humane studies are means for ascertaining the norms of the civil social order, and for informing the statesman and the reflecting public of the possibilities and the limits of social measures." This, in miniature, is the key body of truth Kirk discusses in The Conservative Mind. Much of the political history of the past century is a horror story that came about only when men chose to cast aside these truths of tradition and history -- and to forget that which ought not to be forgotten.

"The permanent things" are bound up in the first "canon of conservatism" articulated by Kirk in the opening section of The Conservative Mind: "Belief in a transcendent order, or body of natural law, which rules society as well as conscience. Political problems, at bottom, are religious and moral problems." Informing all life, acknowledged or not, is a transcendent order -- what many would call the providential prov·i·den·tial  
adj.
1. Of or resulting from divine providence.

2. Happening as if through divine intervention; opportune. See Synonyms at happy.
 truths of God -- from which depend those areas of life that make man more than a mere trousered ape: the life of the spirit, the life of imagination and wisdom, the high worth of family, land, and love. Thus the first concern of the modern conservative, wrote Kirk, is "the regeneration of spirit and character -- with the perennial problem of the inner order of the soul, the restoration of the ethical understanding and the religious sanction upon which any life worth living is founded." He considered this "conservatism at its highest." In a time of social decadence, conservatives must be a remnant who "are not looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a brave new world Brave New World

Aldous Huxley’s grim picture of the future, where scientific and social developments have turned life into a tragic travesty. [Br. Lit.: Magill I, 79]

See : Dystopia


Brave New World
, but instead seek to restore what once was, and so may be again."

After 50 years, Kirk's masterwork mas·ter·work  
n.
See masterpiece.
 still serves. At a time when pleasant, cultured voices encourage Americans to believe that there is no connection between the state of the soul and the state of the commonwealth, it is plain that The Conservative Mind retains its relevance as a literary touchstone for those who seek and value ordered freedom. Kirk issued a call for all the verve, all the imagination, all the prudential wisdom the rising generation had to offer -- and his call still reverberates.
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Title Annotation:Russell Kirk
Author:Person, James E., Jr.
Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 16, 2003
Words:1130
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