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Strauss, Leo
(redirected from Leo Strauss)

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Strauss, Leo, 1899–1973, American philosopher, b. Hesse, Germany. Strauss fled the Nazis and came to the United States, where he taught at the Univ. of Chicago (1949–68). Strauss is known for his controversial interpretations of political philosophers, including Xenophon and Plato. Strauss wrote an influential critique of modern political philosophy, i.e., philosophy since Machiavelli, arguing that it suffers from an inability to make value judgments about political regimes, even about obviously odious ones. As a model for how political philosophy should proceed, Strauss held up the work of the Ancients, i.e., Xenephon and Plato. He defended the antihistoricist position that it is possible for a person to grasp the thought of philosophers of different eras on their own terms, i.e., unencumbered by presuppositions inherent in his own historical context. Strauss's works include Natural Right and History (1952), Thoughts on Machiavelli (1958), and The City and Man (1964).

Bibliography

See S. B. Drury, The Political Ideas of Leo Strauss (1987).


Strauss, Leo (1899–1973) political scientist; born in Kirchhain (Hesse), Germany. Educated in Germany, he emigrated to the U.S.A. in 1938. He taught at the New School for Social Research until 1949, then at the University of Chicago (1949–67). Known for his fierce allegiance to the study of classical political philosophy, he shunned the new behavioral and quantitative approaches to political science.


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He was not coy about his influences, either: he wrote that after Marxist philosopher Sidney Hook, "the two thinkers who had the greatest subsequent impact on my thinking were Lionel Trilling and Leo Strauss.
The neocons, the disciples of the Jewish thinker Leo Strauss, knew they were lying.
Counter to political theorist Leo Strauss, Oakley sees the development of a secular social theory not in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, with Hobbes and Grotius, but much earlier in the thirteenth century with the thinking of William of Ockham.
 
 
 
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