This section contains 2,447 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “A True Sociologist,” in The Intercollegiate Review, Vol. 33, No. 2, spring, 1998, pp. 38-42.
In the following essay, Stone briefly reviews Nisbet's life and work, emphasizing Nisbet's criticisms of centralized power and the romantic individualism of Jean Jacques Rousseau.
Henri Bergson once observed that a true great thinker says but one thing in his life because he has but one point of contact with the real. By this Bergson meant that although a great thinker may have a variety of interests, he typically embraces one great truth that animates each of his pursuits and serves as a guide to lesser truths. Whether or not this holds generally, it is true of Robert Nisbet, who passed away on September 9, 1996, three weeks short of his eighty-third birthday. In each of his thirteen books, beginning with The Quest for Community (1953), and in virtually every one of his numerous articles, including “Still Questing...
This section contains 2,447 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |