Must viewing this weekend: On C-Span’s “After Words” series, Bill Kristol, who wrote the foreword to The Neoconservative Persuasion, the new collection of his late father’s essays, discusses those essays and Irving Kristol’s thought in general with David Brooks.
You can watch the show:
* Saturday, January 22nd at 10pm (ET)
* Sunday, January 23rd at 9pm (ET)
* Monday, January 24th at 12am (ET)
* Monday, January 24th at 3am (ET)
James Q. Wilson reviews The Neoconservative Persuasion today in the Wall Street Journal:
What was “neo” about Kristol was not an ideology (he found all of them incomplete) but his view that no ideology could match the complexity of human nature, take properly into account the significance of religion or cope with the unintended consequences of public policies.
And Harvard’s Ruth Wisse has a review of the collection at Jewish Ideas Daily. Wisse considers Irving Kristol as “an important Jewish thinker–and especially important for American Jews:”
In a climate of cultural conformism, the elites being, as Kristol reminded us, much more conformist than the average American, this Jewish intellectual, as independent-minded as they come, gave American Jews the best guidelines for becoming at once fully mature citizens of their country and fully mature representatives of their people.