Hunting Down Social Darwinism Will This Canard Go Extinct

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230 Chapter 9


135.G. L. Mosse1964,15. T. P. Hughes1989,293,alsoremarksuponthe anti-industrialismpopularin
early-twentieth-centuryGermany.
136.G. L. Mosse1964,19–23,108–09, 121.
137.A. P. Shepherd 1983 U.S.version,70–73, 200–03.
138.L. F. Edmunds 1982 2d ed., 15.
139.R. Grunberger1971,44–45.
140.G. L. Mosse1964,44–45, 172–74, 180, 26.
141.G. L. Mosse 1985 tradepaperback,100.
142.G. L. Mosse1964,43, 55.
143.E. Diederichs1936,84, translatedinto Englishand quotedby G. L. Mosse1964,56.
144.G. L. Mosse1964,288.Thisinfluencecan be seenin OttoStrasser’sFourteenThesesof the German
Revolutionfrom1929.
145.P. Staudenmaier2013.
146.Fest 1974 U.S.version,101. Galbraith1987,92, admitsthat AdamMüller (1779–1829)was a German
romanticistandadvocateof governismwhohadan influenceon NaziideologyandAdolfHitler.Ibid.
also observesthe influenceof FriedrichList on Germany’s nineteenth-centurygovernistideology.
147.A. Padgen2013,12.
148.Orwell1968f,118.
149.Mowry1958,22; and P. Watson2010,318–326. Thisis also admittedin Galbraith1987,165, 292.
150.Zakaria2003,66.
151.E. P. Cubberley 1934 rev. expandeded., 449–454; and P. Watson2010,316–18.
152.Ekirch1974,24-25.Mowry1958,22, pointsout the nineteenth-centuryGermaninfluenceover
RichardEly and SimonPatten.
153.D. Ross1991,165, pointsout Hegel’s influenceoverDewey.
154.For informationon Dewey,see D. Ross1991,155–165;and P. Watson2010,539–541.Mowry1958,
22, andD. Ross1991,105,pointout thatRichardT. Ely considerednineteenth-centuryGermanyhis
modelfor the idealsort of politicalsystemfor the USA.EdwardA. Rosshimselfstudiedin Germanyand
wasinfluencedby its dominatingturn-of-the-centurypoliticalphilosophy.Theinformationon Simon
Pattenis fromT. Russell2010,248. Ekirch1974,24–27, also admitsthat theseProgressiveswereinfluenced
by nineteenth-centurybig-governmentthoughtin Germany.
155.T. Kealey1996,349.
156.G. L. Mosse1964,157, citingL. Gurlitt1906,98.
157.See W. O. Henderson1983.Galbraith1987,92, observesthe influenceof FriedrichList on Germa-
ny’s nineteenth-centurygovernistideology.
158.G. L. Mosse1964,247.
159.The DNVPqtd. by G. L. Mosse1964,248.
160.M. Lind2005,244.
161.D. Ross1991,38–39.
162.W. Wilson1968b,365–67. Zakaria2003,66, broughtthisstatementof WoodrowWilson’s to my
attention.
163.D. Ross1991,236.
164.A. Herman1997,306–09. The rest of the bookis howtheseideasfilteredintoleftistthoughtin the
USAand Francethroughoutthe late 1960sonward.
165.A. Herman1997,420.
166.The politicalLeft’s transitionfromthatof the pro-industrialization,pro-technologyOld Leftto the
anti-industrialization,anti-technologyNewLeft of the 1970sis documentedin A. Herman1997.
167.A. Padgen2013,19–20.
168.A. Padgen2013,19–20, quotingJ. Gray1997.
169.Kaczynski1995,http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/unabomber/manifes-
to.text.htm,accessedMonday,March25, 2013.
170.T. Kealey1996,316.
171.McGillUniversityclassicsprofessorAnneCarsonin TV documentaryThe NobelLegacy, airedMay
1994,qtd. in D. R. Herschbach1996,12.
172.P. R. Grosset al., eds. 1996,tradepaperback,207.
173.M. Specter2009,1–2.
174.Qtd.by M. Specter2009,2.
175.K. A. MacDougall1996,accessedonlineMonday,June9, 2014.
176.W. M. Hern1993,accessedonlineMonday,June9, 2014.Thepapersof KentMacDougalland
WarrenHerncameto my attentionthroughDianaHsieh,“Do YouWantto ReduceYourCarbonFoot-
printto Zero?”,NoodleFood, July5, 2012,http://www.philosophyinaction.com/blog/?p=6721,accessed
Sunday,July9, 2014.
177.FredPearce,“WhyAre EnvironmentalistsTakingAnti-SciencePositions?”,YaleEnvironment 360 ,
October22, 2012,http://e360.yale.edu/feature/why_are_environmentalists_taking_anti-science_positions/
2584/,accessedMonday,June9, 2014.

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