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Angels and ages: a short book about Darwin,…
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Angels and Ages: Lincoln, Darwin, and the Birth of the Modern Age… (original 2009; edition 2010)

by Adam Gopnik

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Member:kevinbutterfield
Title:Angels and Ages: Lincoln, Darwin, and the Birth of the Modern Age (Vintage)
Authors:Adam Gopnik
Info:Vintage (2010), Edition: 1 Reprint, Paperback, 256 pages
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Angels and ages: a short book about Darwin, Lincoln and modern life by Adam Gopnik (2009)

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Gopnik takes a simple conceit, the fact that Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin were born on the same day, and uses this as a launching point for a discursive, free form essay, about each man's contribution to the age of modernity. Gopnik praises Lincoln for his ability to distil complex legal arguments into a simple message any man could grasp. Too bad he cannot emulate his hero in this respect. Gopnik says his book is short, but at 200 pages it's a hundred pages too long. This would have been much better had it remained a New Yorker essay. The book rambles and Gopnik wears his erudition on his sleeve. Not an author I will be revisiting. ( )
  OccassionalRead | Feb 27, 2013 |
Adam Gopnik is a writer for the 'New Yorker' and has written this small book which contains dual biography of Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln which he ties together because they were both born on 12 February 1809. In his two essays the author analyzes what he sees as their influence on modern society. He contends that these two men introduced what we know as the liberal modern age with Lincoln's speeches and Darwin’s writings. That these were the men and vehicles used to spread the new ideas that formed modern society. As a dual historical biography he fails but as two separate essays they would be excellent for publication within the pages of the magazine he works for. Or if you are just looking for a casual introduction into these two men it would be worth reading. ( )
  hermit | Sep 6, 2010 |
My annual Lincoln/Darwin Day reading is a short book published for the bicentennial of their birth. This book is an extended rumination on the lives of two men born on the same day who helped create the modern world. Gopnik sees both Lincoln and Darwin as men of words, Lincoln with speech and rhetoric and Darwin with his novelistic prose. The title and a major issue upon which Gopnik builds his narrative is the debate of Edward Stanton's eulogy for Lincoln, whether he said "Now he belongs to the angels" or "Now he belongs to the ages." This book is an interesting but not essential addition to the literature about these two fascinating men.

Favorite Passages:
"The thesis is that literary eloquence is essential to liberal civilization; our heroes should be men and women possessed by the urgency of utterance, obsessed by the need to see for themselves and to speak for us all. Authoritarian societies can rely on an educated elite; mere mass society, on shared dumb show. Liberal cities can't. A commitment to persuasion is in itself a central liberal principle. New ways of thinking demand new kinds of eloquence. Our world rests on science and democracy, on seeing and saying; it rests on thinking new thoughts and getting them heard by a lot of people." p. 22
"The attempt to make Lincoln into just one more racist is part of the now common attempt to introduce a noxious equilibrium between minds and parties: liberals who struggle with their own prejudices are somehow equal in prejudice to those who never took the trouble to make the struggle. Imperfect effort at being just is no different from perfect indifference to it." -p. 49
"... for the first time, and despite much conventional religious piety -- there's a nascent sence throughout the liberal world that the deaths of young men in war will never be justified in the eyes of a good God, and never compensated for by a meeting in another world. Their deaths can be made meaningful only through a vague idea of Providence and through the persistence of a living ideal." - p. 120 ( )
  Othemts | Mar 4, 2010 |
Darwin and Lincoln, born on the very same day, remade the world. In this book Adam Gopnik delineates their lives and tries to explain his view of Modern Life. He's much better with the literary and biographical analysis than he is with the Big Theories. (Just an idea -- if you're going to expound a Big Theory in a book, best not to invite comparisons with Charles Darwin.)
Gopnik gets big points for noticing one important way in which Lincoln and Darwin were alike, as men and as writers: they built grand ideas on solid foundations of carefully accumulated detail. People came to accept Darwin's theory because he presented such a mass of closely-observed evidence to back it up. Lincoln could remake American law and society so thoroughly because he could, like the lawyer he was, buttress his arguments with citations of precedent and history, arranged in a coldly logical manner no one could deny. Accept his premise, and you had to accept his conclusion -- that was true of both the Emancipator and the shy Mr. Darwin.
Gopnik spends a lot of time talking about the words spoken by Lincoln's War Secretary just after Abe died: did Stanton say "Now he belongs to the ages," or did he utter "Now he belongs to the angels?" Frankly, I don't care, and we'll never now. It seems like the kind of angels-on-the-head-of-a-pin question that neither Darwin nor Lincoln would have dawdled with for long.
  subbobmail | Jul 22, 2009 |
Notable for a bibliographic essay at the end of the book.
  3wheeledlibrarian | Jul 4, 2009 |
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For my mother and father—onlie begetters and first professors
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We are all pebbles dropped in the sea of history, where the splash strikes one way and the big tides run another, and though what we feel is the splash, the splash takes place only within those tides.
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0307270785, Hardcover)

On a memorable day in human history, February 12, 1809, two babies were born an ocean apart: Abraham Lincoln in a one-room Kentucky log cabin; Charles Darwin on an English country estate. It was a time of backward-seeming notions, when almost everyone still accepted the biblical account of creation as the literal truth and authoritarianism as the most natural and viable social order. But by the time both men died, the world had changed: ordinary people understood that life on earth was a story of continuous evolution, and the Civil War had proved that a democracy could fight for principles and endure. And with these signal insights much else had changed besides. Together, Darwin and Lincoln had become midwives to the spirit of a new world, a new kind of hope and faith.

Searching for the men behind the icons of emancipation and evolution, Adam Gopnik shows us, in this captivating double life, Lincoln and Darwin as they really were: family men and social climbers; ambitious manipulators and courageous adventurers; the living husband, father, son, and student behind each myth. How do we reconcile Lincoln, the supremely good man we know, with the hardened commander who wittingly sent tens of thousands of young soldiers to certain death? Why did the relentlessly rational Darwin delay publishing his “Great Idea” for almost twenty years? How did inconsolable grief at the loss of a beloved child change each man? And what comfort could either find—for himself or for a society now possessed of a sadder, if wiser, understanding of our existence? Such human questions and their answers are the stuff of this book.

Above all, we see Lincoln and Darwin as thinkers and writers—as makers and witnesses of the great change in thought that marks truly modern times: a hundred years after the Enlightenment, the old rule of faith and fear finally yielding to one of reason, argument, and observation not merely as intellectual ideals but as a way of life; the judgment of divinity at last submitting to the verdicts of history and time. Lincoln considering human history, Darwin reflecting on deep time—both reshaped our understanding of what life is and how it attains meaning. And they invented a new language to express that understanding. Angels and Ages is an original and personal account of the creation of the liberal voice—of the way we live now and the way we talk at home and in public. Showing that literary eloquence is essential to liberal civilization, Adam Gopnik reveals why our heroes should be possessed by the urgency of utterance, obsessed by the need to see for themselves, and endowed with the gift to speak for us all.

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 09 Jan 2013 05:30:18 -0500)

(see all 2 descriptions)

On February 12, 1809, two men were born an ocean apart: Abraham Lincoln in a one-room Kentucky log cabin; Charles Darwin on an English country estate. Each would see his life's work inspire a stark change in mankind's understanding of itself. In this bicentennial twin portrait, Adam Gopnik shows how these two giants, who never met, altered the way we think about death and time--about the very nature of earthly existence.… (more)

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