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Paperback Liberty or Equality: The Challenge of Our Times Book

ISBN: 1610160304

ISBN13: 9781610160308

Liberty or Equality: The Challenge of Our Times

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Format: Paperback

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Great Book Available for $25 at Mises.org

I highly recommend this book but mostly am submitting this review for the benefit of those who would like to obtain an affordable (and new) copy. It's been out of print for many years but as of 2007 Mises.org offered a new edition. Look for the authors name under the "K"s. His other great book "Menace of the Herd", also out of print for many years, is also available there. Get them while you can!

A Classic of Traditional Liberalism

In this book, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn (who was largely responsible for his friend Friedrich Hayek being received into the Catholic Church before he died) has written a very thoughful work that challenges many of the cherished presuppositions of American conservatives. If you are the sort who can stomach reading a whole book online, there is a facsimile copy of it at conservativeclassics dotcom.

Freedom Wears a Crown!

Written by famous German Roman Catholic rightist, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, and published by Christendom Press, _Liberty or Equality?_ consists of reflections on the nature of liberty and the same opposition to democracy as seen in Kuehnelt-Leddihn's later work _Leftism Revisited_. Kuehnelt-Leddihn who describes himself as a "liberal of the far right" argues against the dangers of leftism and the herdist mentality found in democracy and totalitarianism. Many others have written on the dangers inherent in democracy including such notables as Plato and Alexis de Toqueville. Kuehnelt-Leddihn also turns his attention to monarchy which he strongly affirms, arguing that the king is in many ways a father to his people. Kuehnelt-Leddihn bases his arguments chiefly on those of Saint Thomas Aquinas and other Catholic saints as well as the teaching of the popes, and shows an affinity for this philosopher although rejecting the excesses of neoThomism. Next, the book turns its attention to an examination of the Catholic countries. Here, the presence of revolutionary elements, including anarchism and assassination, within Catholic countries (as well as those of Eastern Orthodoxy) is mentioned, including Spain and Italy, but also Russia and the Slavic nations. Kuehnelt-Leddihn notes that according to Aquinas tyrannicide may be justifiable, and that certain other saints allow for this possibility, while Lutheranism and other Protestant theologies distinctly reject it. Anarchism (which like the Catholic ecclesiastical nations also bears the black flag) plays an important part in the thought of Kuehnelt-Leddihn who shows much affinity for liberty and anarchy in this form. Indeed, an entire discussion is devoted to the Spanish anarchists, and perhaps an attempt is made to combine anarchism and monarchism with traditionalist Catholicism. The book concludes with two chapters dealing with Protestantism, the Reformation, and the rise of the National Socialists. Kuehnelt-Leddihn argues that the National Socialists can trace their ancestry back to Jan Hus, Czech rebel and heretic who was burned at the stake in the Middle Ages, and subsequent influence on Martin Luther (although to what extent this may be is undetermined). Luther himself may have strongly influenced Nazism and it is shown that the Lutheran nations and parts of Germany (as well as those of a Calvinist persuasion) voted in a much stronger block for the Nazis than did the Roman Catholics in the south of Germany, and Bavaria. Luther may also have played a role in the rise of modern democracy; however, the role of Luther as a reformer has been greatly misunderstood by the modern era. It is often believed, particularly by liberal Protestants, that Luther represented a force of Enlightenment and liberalism against the backwards excesses of the Roman Catholic church and the papacy. However, in fact, this is not true. Luther represented merely a reaction against the Renaissance humanism which had
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