Waubonsee Community College

What Lincoln believed, the values and convictions of America's greatest president, Michael Lind

Label
What Lincoln believed, the values and convictions of America's greatest president, Michael Lind
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 315-345) and index
resource.biographical
contains biographical information
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
What Lincoln believed
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
54046315
Responsibility statement
Michael Lind
Sub title
the values and convictions of America's greatest president
Summary
This intellectual biography uncovers the heart of Lincoln's public philosophy and places his ideals and presidential decisions within the context of his times. Lind dispels the popular image of Lincoln as a self-made man and a naive, inspired genius, and shows that the president was very much a product of his time and place, influenced by the pragmatism of his fellow Kentuckian Henry Clay, and by Enlightenment thinking. Lind asserts that Lincoln fought the Civil War not to free the slaves, or even to preserve the Constitution, but to ensure the survival of democracy. With the failure of numerous liberal revolutions throughout Europe in 1848 heightening the possibility that democracy itself would be deemed a noble but failed experiment, Lincoln realized that the stakes in the Civil War were nothing less than the future freedom and prosperity of all mankind. It was this conviction that determined his policies and compelled him to wage the war to the bitter end. Lind also reveals that Lincoln was not a Christian, but a deist who believed in the abstract deity posited by Enlightenment philosophers; and that although he believed slavery was evil, he opposed the idea of a multiracial country and supported the relocation of black Americans abroad
Classification
Mapped to

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