Seymour Martin Lispet, RIP

I can't believe I missed this, but according to Ed Kilgore, I did ... Seymour Martin Lipset passed away on December 31st.

Ironic that this would come a few days after I note the concept of American Exceptionalism, I suppose. Lipset was one of the key minds that shaped a lot of thought that went on at the Progressive Policy Institute (as the related New Dem Dispatch attests to).

I never had the opportunity to meet Lipset during my brief stop in the PPI interns' den. But I was aware of his effect on those that I worked with. By the time I happened upon a used copy of "American Exceptionalism" in the late 90s, I better understood the effect he had on several others in search of "third way" policy options. Whether you've heard the name or not, you've seen his ideas put into practice, enunciated from the lips of others, or attempted in whatever halting a manner as lesser minds might take a swing at. He'll still be missed, though.

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TexasLiberal said:

I wanted to make sure you got some credit for a post about Seymour Martin Lipset. I read Political Man a number of years ago. I wish I could recall the specifics better. Lipset's death is reason to go back and look at the book again. I recently purchased a book detailing the thought of Richard Hofstadter at different stages of his career and I'm looking forward to reading it. It would be good today we had political thinkers who had at least some measure of popular success in the way that Lipset and Hofstadter once did.

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TexasLiberal on Seymour Martin Lispet, RIP: I wanted to make sure you got some credit for a post about Seymour Martin Lipset. I read Political M

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