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...Asbell overlooks the cases in which automation is truly likely to victimize the worker, he neglects also to propose any coherent plan of therapy for the social ills he illustrates. Most of the time he seems to be banking on sheer optimism, Manifest Destiny, and old-fashioned Emersonian self-reliance. He also praises desultory federal organs like the Area Redevelopment Administration, and the miraculous powers of new teaching techniques. Nowhere, however, does he suggest concrete rules or steps for accommodating men to machines with a minimum of social waste. As bell's enthusiasm is like electricty without a power cable...

Author: By Eugene E. Leach, | Title: Technology and Education in an American Eden | 3/12/1965 | See Source »

Riverboat Devil. What Melville aims at in these episodes is a scathing, nihilistic critique of every reigning belief of 19th century America: shallow assumptions about perpetual progress, Christian hypocrisy and pretensions, easy optimism about man, nature and the universe, Emersonian uplift and self-seeking self-reliance, and the hard-driving spirit of commerce in all things. But Melville will not stop until he can debunk the goodness and glory of God. In a final episode, an old man sits reading the Bible by the light of a solitary lamp. A young sharper (not the confidence-man) exposes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Misanthrope | 3/7/1955 | See Source »

With this Emersonian diagnosis, Konvitz proceeds to offer a solution. He writes: "I would like to see serious thought given to the possibility and advisability of requiring two years of General Education, with an emphasis on the Humanities, for all Cornell students. During these two years, there should be a prohibition upon anything that looks 'practical' or vocational or directly related to the bread-and-butter aspect of education...

Author: By Daniel A. Rezneck, | Title: Cornell: One the Ivy League's Frontier | 10/9/1954 | See Source »

...seen again for a while. The Adams House Musical Society brought unusual music to a large number of people. In making them familiar with unfamiliar music, it became an institution which will be sorely missed. Now, at its end, it has become a reminder of the old Emersonian saw about an institution being the lengthened shadow...

Author: By Jerome Goodman, | Title: From the Pit | 5/2/1951 | See Source »

State of Mind traces the parabolic development of the Boston mind-from Puritan bedrock to the brilliant flights of the Emersonian era, and towards the final settling in the dreary marshes of the Mayor Curley epoch. The book ends on "the late George Apley's" symptomatic, harassed query about "a certain doctor named Sigmund Freud," who seemed to proper Bostonians a latter-day Emblem of Hell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: From Hell to Gout | 7/26/1948 | See Source »

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