This book explores the mindset of American government officials who decided that necessity required that American democracy should be defended by actions and policies contrary to traditional ideals of democracy. The works of Aristotle, current mental health professionals, Edmund Burke, Reinhold Niebuhr, Friedrich Meinecke, and George Kennan bolster this analysis.
This book explores the mindset of American government officials who decided that necessity required that American democracy should be defended by actions and policies contrary to traditional ideals of democracy. The works of Aristotle, current mental health professionals, Edmund Burke, Reinhold Niebuhr, Friedrich Meinecke, and George Kennan bolster this analysis.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
John DiJoseph is adjunct professor in the Graduate Liberal Studies Program at Loyola University in Maryland where he has taught seminars on the terrorist mindset, the media and electronic technology, and the effect of American intelligence services on American culture.
Inhaltsangabe
Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Acknowledgements Chapter 3 CHAPTER 1: Realism, Idealism and Noble Cause Corruption Chapter 4 CHAPTER 2: Historical Background of Noble Cause Corruption: The American Tradition vs. the European Tradition Chapter 5 CHAPTER 3: Analysis of American Cause Corruption Chapter 6 CHAPTER 4: Thinking Critically: The Corrupters' Mindset Chapter 7 CHAPTER 5: Ideology and the Banality of Evil and Noble Cause Corruption Chapter 8 CHAPTER 6: Noble Cause Corruption and "Following Orders" Chapter 9 CHAPTER 7: American Noble Cause Corruption: The Insights of Reinhold Niebuhr and Friedrich Meinecke Chapter 10 CHAPTER 8: The Footprints of American Noble Cause Corrupters Chapter 11 CHAPTER 9: The Corrupters' Justification: John Le Carr?, Richard Sorge and Cognitive Dissonances Chapter 12 CHAPTER 10: Noble Cause Corrupters are an Internal Threat to American Democracy Chapter 13 CHAPTER 11: Controlling the Corrupters Chapter 14 CHAPTER 12: Curbing the Corrupters: Leadership and Final Word Chapter 15 Selected Bibliography Chapter 16 Index
Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Acknowledgements Chapter 3 CHAPTER 1: Realism, Idealism and Noble Cause Corruption Chapter 4 CHAPTER 2: Historical Background of Noble Cause Corruption: The American Tradition vs. the European Tradition Chapter 5 CHAPTER 3: Analysis of American Cause Corruption Chapter 6 CHAPTER 4: Thinking Critically: The Corrupters' Mindset Chapter 7 CHAPTER 5: Ideology and the Banality of Evil and Noble Cause Corruption Chapter 8 CHAPTER 6: Noble Cause Corruption and "Following Orders" Chapter 9 CHAPTER 7: American Noble Cause Corruption: The Insights of Reinhold Niebuhr and Friedrich Meinecke Chapter 10 CHAPTER 8: The Footprints of American Noble Cause Corrupters Chapter 11 CHAPTER 9: The Corrupters' Justification: John Le Carr?, Richard Sorge and Cognitive Dissonances Chapter 12 CHAPTER 10: Noble Cause Corrupters are an Internal Threat to American Democracy Chapter 13 CHAPTER 11: Controlling the Corrupters Chapter 14 CHAPTER 12: Curbing the Corrupters: Leadership and Final Word Chapter 15 Selected Bibliography Chapter 16 Index
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