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  1. Intellectuals have an enormous emotional (and egotistical) stake in their idealistic visions. Intellectuals believe society and the masses cannot prosper without adopting and implementing their idealistic prescriptions. Unfortunately, the ideas intellectuals have peddled – unilateral disarmament, income redistribution, and moral relativism, for

  2. 5. Jan. 2010 · One of the most surprising aspects of this study is how often intellectuals have been proved not only wrong, but grossly and disastrously wrong in their prescriptions for the ills of society—and how little their views have changed in response to empirical evidence of the disasters entailed by those views. Intellectuals and Society 下载 mobi ...

  3. Intellectuals and Society is the latest in a series of books on Western `intellectuals', by Thomas Sowell. Intellectuals deal with ideas, but may not do so intelligently. Sowell is mainly concerned with the verifiability of ideas. The social visions of intellectuals like Rousseau, Marx and Engels, Galbraith, and Keynes have had dire consequences.

  4. Sowell unravels the world of intellectuals in order to illustrate an important social phenomenon: how the thinkers of a society mold that society, leaving an impact on people in every walk of life, even if these thinkers are basically unknown to the world at large.

  5. 2. Sept. 2016 · Intellectuals and Society. September 2, 2016. “There has probably never been an era in history when intellectuals have played a larger role in society than the era in which we live. When those who generate ideas, the intellectuals proper, are surrounded by a wide penumbra of those who disseminate those ideas – whether as journalists ...

  6. sweeping study, Intellectuals and Society . He re I have be latedly taken the advice of my research assistant Na Liu, and published these chapters in a separate book for those who wis h to focus on racial issues, rather than take on t he larger a nd more time-consuming task of traveling on a more

  7. By F.A. Hayek. [Reprinted from The University of Chicago Law Review (Spring 1949), pp. 417-420, 421-423, 425-433, by permission of the author and the publisher, The University of Chicago Press; George B. de Huszar ed., The Intellectuals: A Controversial Portrait (Glencoe, Illinois: the Free Press, 1960) pp. 371-84.