In What the World Should Be; Malcolm Magee demonstrates that Woodrow Wilson was immersed in a Presbyterian tradition that shaped his presidency. He argues that Wilson's religious convictions shaped his concepts of effective leadership; the way he reasoned; and his use of language. In particular; Wilson's religious beliefs accustomed him to the theological principle of antinomy: that two principles could both be right even when; considered only in the light of logic; they appear mutually contradictory. These convictions ultimately made Wilson believe he was providentially chosen to bring divinely ordered freedom to the nations and peoples of the earth.
#9533187 in Books E-BookTime; LLC 2007-03-26Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.02 x .13 x 5.98l; .21 #File Name: 159824462056 pages
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy Henry L. Schultz Jr.Know Tony DeBlasi and we have discussed the. Korean War.