About this item
Highlights
- Angelo Codevilla, a towering intellect and prolific scholar, left an indelible mark on the study of political philosophy and statesmanship.
- Author(s): Ryan P Williams
- 136 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Political
Description
Book Synopsis
Angelo Codevilla, a towering intellect and prolific scholar, left an indelible mark on the study of political philosophy and statesmanship. An Italian immigrant, Codevilla embraced America with a fervent belief in its republican ideals. His academic journey took him to Rutgers, where his early promise in physics hinted at the analytical rigor he later applied to political philosophy. Pursuing his passion for understanding human governance, he earned a PhD under Harry Jaffa at Claremont Graduate School, where he also studied under Leo Strauss. A naval intelligence officer, foreign service officer, and staffer on the US Senate's Select Committee on Intelligence, Codevilla bridged the worlds of strategic policyand classical thought. His advocacy for missile defense during the Reagan administration - a concept many deemed visionary - was matched only by his sharp critiques of the bipartisan political class. Codevilla's profound engagement with the writings of Machiavelli, Tocqueville, and America's founders informed his incisive works, including The Character of Nations and America's Rise and Fall Among Nations. A translator of Machiavelli's The Prince and an unrelenting critic of technocratic governance, he inspired a generation of thinkers to confront uncomfortable truths about modernity and the American regime. This festschrift gathers the reflections of prominent scholars who honor Codevilla's enduring legacy and the clarity he brought to questions of liberty, statesmanship, strategy, and the fate of nations. Essential reading for students of history, politics, and statecraft, it celebrates a man whose insights continue to resonate with patriotic Americans and lovers of freedom across the West.Review Quotes
Angelo Codevilla was proof of the inadequacy of the hawk-dove, isolationist-internationalist dichotomies in American grand strategy. He advocated American involvement abroad when doing so was clearly in America's interest and non-interference in matters that were none of our business. Like Donald J. Trump, Codevilla transcends the stale categories of the American foreign policy establishment. Because he does not neatly fit, maybe it's time to create a new category: Codevillian.
--Michael Anton, Director, Policy Planning Staff, U.S. Dept. of State; Jack Roth Senior Fellow in American Politics, Claremont Institute
Claremont does a wonderful service in publishing this book. Angelo Codevilla was one of the most valuable Americans, clearsighted, candid, profound, and brave. He called attention to the worst things in light of his ability to see the best things. To remember and emulate him are excellent rules by which to live.
--Larry P. Arnn, president of Hillsdale College