Articles, Essays, Reviews
The Decline and Fall of Footnotes: Is the footnote still the handmaiden of academia, or has it become the Achilles' heel of university publications? by Bruce Anderson, Stanford Magazine
Articles, Essays, Reviews
The Decline and Fall of Footnotes: Is the footnote still the handmaiden of academia, or has it become the Achilles' heel of university publications? by Bruce Anderson, Stanford Magazine
[Leo] Strauss's critique of the end of history thesis--long before Francis Fukuyama brought the subject to public attention--was simultaneously a critique of the modern, cosmopolitan aspirations of the dominant progressivism that accepted a cosmopolitan outcome as the only rational object of political and moral striving. Strauss's objections were taken as prima facie evidence of his anti-progressive and therefore reactionary and anti-democratic tendencies. It was assumed by proponents of progressivist cosmopolitanism that the only alternative to their view was a narrow, parochial, ethnic nationalism, which was defined as, in principle, fascistic. But Strauss did not accept that a cosmopolitan/fascist dichotomy exhausted the available options. He was a proponent of neither. Strauss becomes a reactionary, anti-Enlightenment conservative only for those incapable of escaping the cosmopolitan/fascist dichotomy--a dichotomy that unfortunately remains all too prevalent.
--Gregory Bruce Smith, "Who Was Leo Strauss?" The American Scholar Winter 1997 p. 103