Bio

Paul A. Rahe is Professor of History at Hillsdale College, where he holds an endowed chair. He is author of Republics Ancient and Modern: Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution (1992) and of Against Throne and Altar: Machiavelli and Political Theory under the English Republic (2008), co-editor of Montesquieu’s Science of Politics: Essays on the Spirit of Laws (2001), and editor of Machiavelli’s Liberal Republican Legacy (2006).

In 2009, Professor Rahe published two books: Montesquieu and the Logic of Liberty, which has as its subtitle War, Religion, Commerce, Climate, Terrain, Technology, Uneasiness of Mind, the Spirit of Political Vigilance, and the Foundations of the Modern Republic, and Soft Despotism, Democracy’s Drift: Montesquieu, Rousseau, Tocqueville, and the Modern Prospect. He can be reached at www.paularahe.com.


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Paul A. Rahe
Name:
Paul A. Rahe
Institution:
Hillsdale College
Joined:
Aug 31, 2010

Recent Comments

Paul A. Rahe

Thanks, Jack. I was on the old show thrice. It was great fun. Good for Milt. Never say die!

Paul A. Rahe
Wade Moore: I followed the link provided to the Amazon site for the book.  There are no reviews for either the hard or soft cover versions.  That seems odd.  Is it really such a niche topic that nobody has bothered to leave their thoughts?  · 21 hours ago

Damned if I know. Bob is pretty well known as a legal scholar -- and this book tries to turn everything upside down.

Paul A. Rahe

Dr Steve: Prof. Rahe,

I am a legal historian, and so might have ordered the book anyway, but my wife just returned from Brazil this weekend, and she was filled with tales of how must further ahead the Brazilians are on racial matters. Or so the Brazilians told her. I will pick up the book, and read it aloud at home.

By the way, Tulsa misses you. The aforementioned wife is Vice Provost of Global Education. · 22 hours ago

Thanks for the kind words. My years in Tulsa were wonderful. When I retire from Hillsdale (whenever that may be), we may move back there.

Paul A. Rahe

I  suspected that -- when my cousin got aggressive prostate cancer in his early sixties and died of it and when my brother got the same, had a successful prostatectomy, and lived on and on -- I should keep my eyes open. I did; I got the cancer; last summer, they scotched it -- and I am glad.

What Angelina Jolie did was to face the music. It must have been and it must be awful. But consider the alternative.

Paul A. Rahe

Pseudodionysius

The new America is dominated by a desire to achieve heaven on this earth by way of rational administration. It has no place for Christianity.

Though there's several strands at work in this post (which I did semi-deliberately) its worth noting that this is the world envisaged by Hegel. I'd be very interested in hearing you and Professor  Hittinger (and possibly others) bat this around either on a podcast or in another video or audio forum. · 3 minutes ago

That would be great fun -- if the powers that be were to organize it. Russell's erudition is truly remarkable, and he has a very interesting take on the manner in which liberal polities have a way of turning into quasi-religious communities. Think of the manner in which Woodrow Wilson, FDR, and Barack Obama have all posed as Messiahs. We were, after all, waiting for "the One."

Paul A. Rahe

I apologize for not noticing this before (I turned in my grades this week, and graduation took place yesterday). I have not yet read the comments. So bear with me if I repeat what someone else has said. I will try to read the comments a bit later, but I may miss them I am off to Rotterdam tomorrow.

The first thing that I would say is that Russell Hittinger is worth attending to. I know him well. We once were colleagues; we taught together; and he is the godfather of my younger daughter.

The second thing that I would say is that one must draw a distinction between America before the Progressives carried out their coup d'etat via the New Deal, the Great Society, and Barack Obama's New Founding. The old America was suspicious of Catholicism but nonetheless hospitable. It left us alone, and we flourished here in a way that we had never flourished in the Old World. Where Church and State are not at all intertwined, the Church does best.

The new America is dominated by a desire to achieve heaven on this earth by way of rational administration. It has no place for Christianity.

Paul A. Rahe

A secretive, off-the-record pre-briefing with selected reporters? Hmm. It would be good to know the names of those reporters. Presumably, they are political operatives posing as members of the Fourth Estate. They should be outed and shamed -- for openly and brazenly accepting instruction from the White House on the spin to be applied to the latest revelations.

Paul A. Rahe

A year ago in June, I gave a talk on the Arab Spring at the annual meeting of the Institute of Current World Affairs (of which I was for five years chairman of the board), and, at the end, of the talk, I remarked, "The civil war in Syria will end when the Turks march in -- and not until then." Had we been willing to back them up -- with supplies and a replenishment of ammunition and weaponry -- the Turks would have gone in some time ago.

Keep in mind that Erdogan's unsolicited advice to the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt was that they should ostentatiously embrace the secular state. He may be difficult, but he is no fool.

Edited on May 6, 2013 at 12:02am
Paul A. Rahe

Crow's Nest

Paul A. Rahe

I asked. He has no particular project in mind. But, as he said to me, I have written all that I intended and a great deal more. Perhaps something will stir him up. · 5 hours ago

Charlie Hill prodded him to write an intellectual autobiography. We'll see, I suppose. · 17 hours ago

Edited 17 hours ago

Charlie's instincts are right on this. It would be quite a tale.

Paul A. Rahe
John H.: A side note, about Cornell: my advisor graduated from it in 1972, as I did in 1978. I picked his lab mainly because the research field was exactly what I'd wanted to get into, but also because I imagined the Cornell experience would make for a bond. It did not. I'd had a great time; he hardly spoke of his time. Except to say what dorm he'd done his time in, I don't think he ever said anything at all about it. I get the idea that Cornell c. 1970 was an awful place. · 19 hours ago

Cornell in 1969 was a glimpse into the future of academe. I enjoyed being there, but once I saw clearly where things were going I was horrified and shifted from left to right almost overnight. Don remained more optimistic than I quickly became. My sense is that he is no longer the optimist he once was.

Paul A. Rahe
Danihel Tornator: Thank you for this post. I have been an admirer of Donald Kagan ever since I read On the Origins of War and Preservation of Peace for History of the Western World I & II during my freshman year at Patrick Henry College. It is interesting to learn about his intellectual journey since the 1960s. I'm sure he will be sorely missed at Yale. Do you know whether he plans to continue to write? · 1 hour ago

I asked. He has no particular project in mind. But, as he said to me, I have written all that I intended and a great deal more. Perhaps something will stir him up.

Paul A. Rahe

Don Kagan was my Doktorvater. We first met forty-five years ago when I was in a discussion section he taught in connection with his course at Cornell on Roman history. I was unable to make the talk but we spent an hour-and-a-half together a week ago Monday, talking Greek history and old times. His retirement, at the age of 80, is a real loss for Yale.

Paul A. Rahe

Mollie, you are too gentle with Ms. Eilperin. She is not stupid. She knows that she is providing cover for Obama -- who has decided that Planned Parenthood is right now just a bit too hot to handle. Ms. Eilperin is, like most Pravda-on-the Potomac reporters, a political operative posing as a reporter. She should be outed as such.

Paul A. Rahe

Or better, "I prefer Hillary!"

Paul A. Rahe

John Kerry has always been a clown. The people of Massachusetts deserved better. But that is what happens when one gets to be a one-party state.

Paul A. Rahe

I was once invited to brunch with Moynihan at his house (as the guest of an old friend of his, with whom I was staying), and I could not go. I have always regretted that I was so constrained. He was among the very few members of the Senate who gave it, rather than took from it, distinction.

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