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Ever since Douglass Adair convincingly demonstrated that a love of fame was central to the American founding, political scientists and historians have started to view the founders and their acts in a new light. In The Noblest Minds, ten distinguished scholars examine this passion for fame and honor and demonstrate for the first time its significance in the development of American democracy. The first two-thirds of the book is devoted to essays on individual founders, as the contributors consider the role of fame in the lives and political characters of Washington, Franklin, Madison, Jefferson, Hamilton, Adams, and Marshall. The remaining chapters analyze the founders' theoretical accomplishment in reviving political science, and explore the problem of honor in the modern world. Political scientists and American historians alike will find this book to be valuable and illuminating. What made the founding generation of American statesmen so outstanding? To answer this question, The Noblest Minds brings together a distinguished group of historians and political scientists to evaluate a neglected but compelling theory advanced nearly four decades ago by Douglass Adair. Adair argued that it was the "love of fame" that moved many of the leading lights of the founding generation. Adair's thesis is the starting point for a series of searching essays on the role of fame in the lives of Adams, Franklin, Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison, Marshall, and Washington. These profiles also provide wide-ranging historical and philosophical reflections on the question of fame. What emerges from these essays is a more complex picture of the founding generation than that presented by Adair. While acknowledging the role of the love of fame, The Noblest Minds argues for the influence of other concerns such as honor, virtue, and the cause of liberty. This more complex picture of the founding generation provides a unique and rewarding vantage point from which to consider the question of "character" in politics, which
Peter McNamara is associate professor of political science at Utah State University, is the author of Political Economy and Statesmanship: Adam Smith and Alexander Hamilton on the Foundation of the Commercial Republic, as well as numerous articles.
Chapter 1 Fame, Founders, and the Idea of Founding in the Eighteenth CenturyChapter 2 Ben Franklin, HeroChapter 3 George Washington and the Life of HonorChapter 4 John Adams and the Quest for FameChapter 5 "The Holy Cause of Freedom": The Libertarian Legacy of Thomas JeffersonChapter 6 James Madison: Memory, Service, and FameChapter 7 Alexander Hamilton, the Love of Fame, and Modern Democratic StatesmanshipChapter 8 John Marshall and the "False Glare" of FameChapter 9 Fame and The FederalistChapter 10 The Classical and Modern Liberal Understandings of HonorChapter 11 BibliographyChapter 12 IndexChapter 13 About the Contributors
This collection would serve as excellent outside reading for courses in American political theory or for those that focus on the founding period.