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This unique intellectual portrait explores the role of ideas in Lincoln's life. Guelzo presents Lincoln as a serious thinker deeply involved in the problems of nineteenth-century thought, including those of classical liberalism, the Lockean Enlightenment, Victorian unbelief, and Calvinist spirituality. Lincoln emerges as a philosophical man who appropriates certain religious values without adhering to any religion, who insists on the pre-eminence of self-interest in spite of becoming the Great Emancipator, and who appeals to natural law and natural theology in politics while remaining a classical nineteenth-century liberal in principle. Based on primary materials from a wide variety of archives, this insightful work sheds light on the intellectual conflicts that led to civil war and that still influence today's “culture wars.”
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Reviews
"Crammed...with fresh observations...Edward Lewis reads clearly and even enthusiastically."
AudioFile
"One of the subtlest and deepest studies of Lincoln's faith and thought in many years.... Seldom has the complex connection between Lincoln's predispositions and Lincoln's achievements been more insightfully studied than in Allen Guelzo's superb book."
Weekly Standard
"Out of the countless volumes written about our sixteenth president, [this] ranks quite simply among the best."
Wall Street Journal