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The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson

The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson

List Price: $16.00
Your Price: $16.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Boorstin Brings History to Life
Review: Boorstin is the best historian I have read. He brings history to life by examining the thought behind the events and the assumptions behind the thought. This is not so much a book about what happened as to why it happened; what the underlying ideas were of the minds that moved the nation at its birth. Boorstin manages to effectively communicate thought processes that are foreign to the modern age. A remarkable achievement. I plan on reading more of his work in the future. Highest recommendation!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Insight into the Jeffersonian World
Review: Daniel Boorstin is one America's great historians and one of America's great writers - a rare combination. Boorstin provides insight into the mind of Thomas Jefferson that illuminates this crucial period of American History. He shows how Jefferson departed from the Puritan heritage and forged a new philosophical base for America that was rooted in her land, not her people. "Things, not ideas, drove the Jeffersonian Worldview". If you are looking for the truth underlying the birth of our nation, you will not find a better resource.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The book was terrible
Review: I found that the author's philosophical ramblings were as uninformative as they were boring. I recommend this book to those suffering from insomnia.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The lost World of Thomas Jefferson
Review: The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson by Daniel J. Boorstin is a look into the early years preceding the birth of the United States and the climate of thought that was current at that time.
Scientific knowledge was starting to be shared and Jefferson seemed to absorb and process a lot of that times current philosophies.

This book is invaluble if you realy want to study or "get a feel" for the times of the 18th and early 19th century. The author goes to great pains in explaining particular events and ideas that were concerning these early scientific thinkers.

This book conveys the thought process behind the events and how the minds of the thinkers moved the nation. Mostly, this book is about American intellectual history, and is engaging as it is history of ideas. These ideas are blended with a purpose to bring the thought of the time into perspective and defines the key problems facing how Jefferson appeared.

This book is worthy of a place on your bookshelf, for reference and a look into American life and thought, aspects that are hard to see today, but are brought out richly in this book.

I highly recommend reading this book by one of America's leading historians .

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Valuable reference to Jeffersonian thought of "Natural Law"
Review: The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson provides an in depth study of the philosophies and amazing depth of scientific knowledge that Thomas Jefferson displayed during his lifetime. The renowned historian, Daniel Boorstin, wrote this wonderful historic piece decades before his more famous works of The Creators, The Discovers and The Seekers. Boorstin's ability to explain a specific set of events and ideas amid the complex myriad of late 18th and early 19th century concerns in political thought and philosophy makes this book a invaluable reference. Thomas Jefferson's basic principle that all law, social construction and philosophy should be grounded with "Natural Law" is explained at depth. Boorstin also explains how the liberal ideals attributed to Jefferson were misinterpreted in the 100 years following his death. If you an interest in either early American Anthropology (although term was not being used per se, it is the only accurate way to describe the emphasis of this book) or American Scientific thought, then this book must grace your shelf.


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