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LEGACY RESTATED
The Work of Bernhard Behrens: Four Essays with Current-day Reviews
Bernhard Behrens, Edited by Christopher Houghton Budd
“Until true individualism—meaning not the continuation but the overcoming of egoism—has the strength to win through against and transform the artificially galvanized group spirits [from the past], the task of culture cannot be fulfilled. Group interests will continue to act as mutual enemies.” — Bernhard Behrens
These essays, written just after World War II by a German economist who arrived in the United States in 1940, provide an unexpectedly helpful contribution to an understanding of our present moment, writ large. Today, when the U.S. is coming to terms with its destiny and its true (as distinct from geopolitical) place in current and world history, seems a propitious time to republish these essays, which first saw the light of day in the mid-twentieth century.
Updated from the 1950s, the view of the challenges and possibilities that Bernhard Behrens provides remain as perceptive and insightful now as when written, especially in regard to economics and democracy.
Bernhard Behrens (1892–1952) was born in Germany and emigrated to the United States via London and Canada in 1941. While still in Germany he published a seven-volume series on anthroposophically oriented economics—placing the free human spirit at the center of his considerations. Beyond his writings on economics and on Rudolf Steiner's "fundamental social law," little is known about his biography.
16 December 2024; SB; 192pp; 216 x 140 mm; paperback;
£17.99 ISBN 9781621483816