The end of greatness : why America can't have (and doesn't want) another great president / Aaron David Miller.
Tipo de material:
- text
- unmediated
- 9781137279002
- 320.973 M647
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura | Copia número | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | |
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Biblioteca Rafael Meza Ayau | Colección Roberto Murray Meza | 320.973 M647 2014 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | 01 | En proceso físico | 71213 |
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320.5 D923 1996 La agonía del pensamiento político occidental / | 320.9 N157 2016 Repensando el mundo : 111 sorpresas del siglo 21 / | 320.9 T917 1992 Is there a transition to democracy in El Salvador? / | 320.973 M647 2014 The end of greatness : why America can't have (and doesn't want) another great president / | 321 F961 2004 La construcción del Estado hacia un nuevo orden mundial en el siglo XXI / | 321.8 D131 1989 Democracy and its critics / | 321.8 D131 1990 After the revolution? : authority in a good society / |
"There is one thing that has haunted all of America's modern presidents: Americans' expectations of greatness in the man and the office. While it was impossible for the Framers of the Constitution to predict the circumstances that would make America the greatest and most consequential power on Earth, the Founders never intended this spotlight on the presidency. Venerating our past great presidents has always been safe, compelling, and inspiring. But when it also tempts us with the possibilities of their return, it may not be so benign. The End of Greatness offers a new way to appreciate and evaluate the presidency, a mode of understanding that gives conventional achievement ratings their place but ultimately makes the counterintuitive argument that, in expecting greatness, we have made goodness simply impossible. This book looks at the concept of greatness in presidents--the ways in which it is essential to a nation and the ways in which it has been detrimental. Miller argues that greatness in presidents is an overrated virtue, one that eclipses--and perhaps even thwarts--the real contributions of our presidents"--
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