From "The Habit of Democracy" by Adam Gopnik in the 15 October 2001 issue of The New Yorker, a review of two books about Alexis de Tocqueville:
At a deeper level, too, [Tocqueville's] turn of mind was French: witty but humorless, indifferent to empirical details, constantly searching for the lucid abstraction, what he called the "general idea."
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Posted on October 16th, 2005 by Scott Granneman
Categories: commonplace book, history, politics
Tags: france, politics, the_new_yorker, tocqueville





