Allitt, Patrick2019-04-162019-04-162011Krakowskie Studia Międzynarodowe 2011, nr 2, s. 33-44.1733-2680http://hdl.handle.net/11315/23248"Harvey Mansfield has always taken the long view. As he sees it, the way to approach an American topic is to ask first what the Founding Fathers said about it, then see what Tocqueville added. In the same way, his approach to any European issue starts out with a word from Plato and Aristotle, then moves along through Augustine and Aquinas to the opinions of Machiavelli and Edmund Burke. In this sense he’s just like the Catholic Church, which has always specialized in taking the long view, while trying to avoid being paralyzed by the weight of tradition. Taking the long view means being aware of oneself as part of an extended historical process, of being indebted to the insights of earlier generations, without being blind to those generations’ limitations. It usually guards against provincialism of time and place steers us away from utopianism, while helping us to see sensible ways forward."(...)enUznanie autorstwa-Użycie niekomercyjne-Bez utworów zależnych 3.0 PolskaCatholicismUSliberalismconservatismMansfieldFilozofiaHistoriaReligioznawstwoCatholicism in The United States: Between liberalism and conservatismArtykuł