The conservative mind : from Burke to Eliot / Russell Kirk

About this book
The book, first published in 1953, is a foundational text that articulates conservatism not as a rigid ideology but as a disposition rooted in tradition, moral order, and historical continuity Kirk traces the intellectual lineage of Anglo-American conservatism from Edmund Burke to T.S. Eliot, emphasizing that true conservatism resists utopian schemes and radical change, instead valuing custom, prescription, and the accumulated wisdom of generations He argues that political problems are fundamentally moral and religious, and that a healthy society depends on an enduring moral order, respect for hierarchy, and the gradual evolution of institutions rather than abrupt reform Central to his vision is the "moral imagination," a Burkean concept that enables individuals to transcend self-interest and perceive ethical truths through literature and art, thus grounding social life in shared cultural and spiritual values The book helped catalyze the postwar conservative movement by presenting conservatism as a serious intellectual tradition capable of countering both liberalism and radicalism
Details
- First published
- 1973
- OL Work ID
- OL2681473W
Subjects
ConservatismPoliticsHistoryPolitical sciencePhilosophy