The Public Philosophy
The Public Philosophy offers as much a glimpse into theprivate philosophy of America's premier journalist of the twentieth century as it does a publicphilosophy. The basis of Lippmann's effort is "that there is a deep disorder in oursociety which comes not from the machinations of our enemies and from the adversaries of thehuman condition, but from within ourselves." He also provides a special sort of legacyto liberalism in its broadest sense. This work is a masterful defense of the public philosophyas a constitutional tradition, and can be easily read as such today.