This study is an exercise in the history of political perception and opinion. It broke new ground in considering the decline of Liberalism through the eyes of Liberals themselves. By concentrating on what Liberal politicians said to one another and to their audience (public and private) a picture is built up of the frame of mind in which those responsible for guiding Liberalism faced a worsening world after 1914. The coming of the First World War was a critical element in forming that frame of mind; and the frame of mind was itself critical in deciding the fate of Liberalism in the post-war years. What emerges from this study is the paradox that the Liberal mind was the greatest single obstacle in the way of a Liberal revival.
A Mind Remedy is a book written by John George Ryerson and published in 1914. The book is a self-help guide that aims to provide readers with practical advice on how to improve their mental health...
This is not a pure study of histoire des mentalités or history of ideas. The purpose of this study is to explore the background of the two ideological movements, namely liberalism and islamism,...
Related to "mind-liberation and wisdom-liberation." This chapter discusses the problems of the "wisdom-liberation explicitly," responds to the shortcomings of previous studies, and puts forward the...