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June 3, 2019|Alexandre Kojève, and Firebrands, Conservatism, Fools, Foucault, Frauds, Habermas, Hegel, Marx, Progressivism, Roger Scruton

Dismantling the Leftist Academic Complex: A Conversation with Roger Scruton

by Sir Roger Scruton|

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Editor’s note: This podcast was originally published on January 27, 2016. A new episode of Liberty Law Talk will return on June 15th with George Will on his recently released book The Conservative Sensibility.

Roger Scruton is certainly no stranger to Liberty Law Talk. His return is occasioned by Bloomsbury’s republication of his 1985 title, Fools, Frauds, and Firebrands, a book that caused tremendous academic controversy, threats against the publisher, and the book’s eventual scuttling by Longman, its original publisher. Scruton’s crime was to have attempted to take the New Left seriously, finding it severely wanting, if not absurd. We revisit the book’s fallout, discuss its ideas, and consider the state of contemporary Leftist thinking.

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Sir Roger Scruton

Over the course of his career, philosopher and polymath Sir Roger Scruton (1944-2020) authored almost 60 books, including Soul of the World, The Face of God, Sexual Desire, The West and the Rest, England: An Elegy, News from Somewhere, Gentle Regrets, and I Drink Therefore I Am.

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