Daniel Schwindt

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Daniel Schwindt

Goodreads Author


Member Since
April 2018


Daniel Schwindt writes on social theory, politics, religion, and history.

Average rating: 3.77 · 118 ratings · 19 reviews · 32 distinct works
The Case Against the Modern...

4.02 avg rating — 49 ratings3 editions
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Catholic Social Teaching: A...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 13 ratings — published 2015 — 3 editions
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The Papist's Guide to America

3.56 avg rating — 9 ratings3 editions
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Understanding the Amoris La...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 5 ratings
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Radically Catholic In the A...

3.60 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2015
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Nothing To Vote For: The Fu...

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Holocaust of the Childlike:...

3.33 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2013 — 3 editions
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The O'Reilly Function: A Sh...

3.33 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2015
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Letter to My Generation: On...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2014
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There Must Be More Than This

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2015
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More books by Daniel Schwindt…
The Weird: A Comp...
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Naked Lunch
Daniel Schwindt is currently reading
bookshelves: currently-reading
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A New History of ...
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Quotes by Daniel Schwindt  (?)
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“When we refer to Liberalism, then, we must be understood as referring to the continuous and wide-ranging tradition of the Enlightenment, a tradition which has gone to form the political and social consensus of the modern world, for there is no developed nation that is not a child of this original Liberalism. It informs and dictates the positions and goals of both the American Right and the American Left. If the former seems by its rhetoric to despise it, we must simply remember Davila's observation: "Today's conservatives are nothing more than Liberals who have been ill- treated by democracy.”
Daniel Schwindt, The Case Against the Modern World: A Crash Course in Traditionalist Thought

“We have to be willing to dig to the subterranean depths of the psyche, but also willing climb to the celestial heights of the soul.”
Daniel Schwindt, Holocaust of the Childlike: The Progress of a Spiritual War

“It is a fact of history that no king could push his people into war as rapidly and as fluidly as George Bush or Barack Obama. And this cannot be dismissed as a technological issue brought about by progress. It stems directly from the configuration of power structures. Here we must emphasize the difference between a stratified society and the modern egalitarian regime. In the latter, the state has direct authority over each individual or group, and this is true primarily because all have been reduced to one dead level. Access to one member on any single level implies access to all. In the stratified framework, however, the authority of a man at the uppermost level does not imply access to any other level beyond that which happens to be immediately adjacent to his own. He does not subsume command of all that falls below him in the vast hierarchy. He sits on the top rung, indeed, but his arms aren't any longer than yours or mine, and so he can only grasp at the next rung down from his own. The medieval king could command his dukes, but he could not command their knights. He could draw taxes from the peasants who lived on his own estate (which was not much larger than a duke's), but he could not draw taxes from the peasants who lived on his dukes' estates. In this way the monarch had no effective way of exercising direct dominion over anyone but the dukes themselves. Any influence on the peasantry was indirect, as a result of convincing the nobility of the justness of his cause. It was open to them to refuse in a way that no American governor can refuse mobilization of his population for a military engagement.”
Daniel Schwindt, The Case Against the Modern World: A Crash Course in Traditionalist Thought

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