Keeping the Tablets: Modern American Conservative ThoughtWilliam F. Buckley (Jr.), Charles R. Kesler |
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Page 34
... accepting the state as a genial servant , the state was never truly integrated as a member of the American household ... accept the state as a sacramental agent for transubstantiating private interest into public good . Consider the ...
... accepting the state as a genial servant , the state was never truly integrated as a member of the American household ... accept the state as a sacramental agent for transubstantiating private interest into public good . Consider the ...
Page 170
... accept many com- mon beliefs , though the value of these reasons may have little to do with their demonstrable truth.40 Such beliefs will also be based on some past experience but not on experience for which anyone can produce the ...
... accept many com- mon beliefs , though the value of these reasons may have little to do with their demonstrable truth.40 Such beliefs will also be based on some past experience but not on experience for which anyone can produce the ...
Page 366
... accept the consequences of using them . In this fundamental sense there seems to have been a nuclear stale- mate throughout the Third World War , except perhaps at the time of the Middle Eastern and Quemoy - Matsu crises in 1958 , quite ...
... accept the consequences of using them . In this fundamental sense there seems to have been a nuclear stale- mate throughout the Third World War , except perhaps at the time of the Middle Eastern and Quemoy - Matsu crises in 1958 , quite ...
Contents
Preface by William F Buckley Jr | 1 |
You Ever See a Dream Walking? by William | 19 |
The Quest for a Tradition | 37 |
Copyright | |
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