Quack, Quack: Difference between revisions

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* human difference is illustrated through human bestiality
* human difference is illustrated through human bestiality


* denies human bestiality, all have same potential
* humans are humans because they trade
 
* greatest happiness principle- golden rule
 
* agreements with evangelicals- but secularized Christianity
 
* opposed Gov. Eyre's actions


==Woolf's oppostion to Carlyle==
==Woolf's oppostion to Carlyle==

Revision as of 22:07, 1 December 2008

Introduction

Quack, Quack! was written by Leonard Woolf in 1935 and expresses his views on fascism and the current state of governments in Europe.

Leonard Woolf, 1935 cover of Quack, Quack with Hitler, Mussolini, and tribal statues

Carlyle - Fascism

Carlyle:

  • Scottish Calvinist
  • believed in the necessity of Heroes and hero worship
  • blamed the Jewish people for social problems without providing any real evidence
  • conducted experiments to prove Jewish inferiority and drew conclusions from assumed ideas
  • used hatred and bias to unite
  • believed that lesser people needed guidance from their superiors to stay human, if not they would degenerate to animals

What Woolfe says about Fascism:

  • relies on charismatic, emotional, passionate leader
  • requires that people give up on rational thought and blindly accept the word of the state
  • depends on people's primal urges

Smith/Mill branch

  • analytical egalitarianism
  • language is the indicator of civilization
  • no difference between "street porter and philosopher"
  • human difference is illustrated through human bestiality
  • humans are humans because they trade
  • greatest happiness principle- golden rule
  • agreements with evangelicals- but secularized Christianity
  • opposed Gov. Eyre's actions

Woolf's oppostion to Carlyle

What Woolfe says about Fascism:

  • relies on charismatic, emotional, passionate leader
  • requires that people give up on rational thought and blindly accept the word of the state
  • depends on people's primal urges
  • Jamaica Committee

Woolf's agreements with Smith/Mill

  • distrust of intellectuals

References

  • Peart, Sandra J., and David M. Levy. 2005. The "vanity of the philosopher". Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
  • Woolf, Leonard. 1935. Quack, quack!.