Claes G. Ryn

Claes Gösta Ryn (born 12 June 1943) is a Swedish-born, American academic and educator.[1]

Background

Ryn was born and raised in Norrköping in Sweden. He attended the Latin Gymnasium, Norrköpings Högre Allmänna Läroverk' (1959–63). He did military service in the Royal Life Company at the I 4 Regiment in Linkoping and the Signal Corps at the S 1 Regiment in Uppsala. He was an undergraduate and a doctoral student at Uppsala University. He did further doctoral study at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, United States, (Ph.D. 1974).

Career

He is a professor of politics at Catholic University of America (CUA), where he was also chairperson of his department for six years. He taught also at the University of Virginia and Georgetown University. He was co-founder and chairperson of the National Humanities Institute and editor of its academic journal Humanitas. He was co-founder and the first president of the Academy of Philosophy and Letters.[2] He is a past president of the Philadelphia Society (2001 to 2002).[3] He is the founder and director of the Center for the Study of Statesmanship css.cua.edu at Catholic University.

Ryn's fields of teaching and research include ethics and politics; epistemology; historicism; politics and culture; the history of Western political thought; conservatism; the theory of constitutionalism and democracy; Jean-Jacques Rousseau; Irving Babbitt; Benedetto Croce.[4]

He has written much on ethics and politics and on the central role of culture, specifically, the imagination, in shaping politics and society. He has sought to reconstitute the epistemology of the humanities and social sciences, paying close attention to the interaction of will, imagination and reason. He has criticized abstract, ahistorical conceptions of rationality as inadequate to the study of distinctively human life and to the study of real universality. He has argued that there is a much different, experientially grounded form of rationality, the reason of philosophy proper, that is capable of at once humble and penetrating observation. He has developed a philosophy known as value-centered historicism, which demonstrates the potential union of universality and historical particularity. In political theory he has been a sharp critic of Straussian anti-historical thinking and so-called neoconservatism. He has argued that in essential ways neoconservatism resembles the ideology of the French Jacobins and is neo-Jacobin.[5][6][7]

Ryn's discussion of democracy emphasizes that popular government can assume radically different forms, only some of which are compatible with a higher, ethical striving. Theories of what he calls plebiscitary democracy assume romantic and utopian notions of human nature and society. Constitutional democracy is based on a more realistic view of man and is more consonant with the actual moral terms of human existence. This form of government has demanding moral and cultural preconditions and is endangered wherever those preconditions are not satisfied.

Ryn has developed a philosophy of civilization and international relations that emphasizes the moral and cultural preconditions of good relations among persons, peoples, and civilizations. It addresses the problem of multiculturalism that has been made acute by globalization. He argues that diversity need not be a source of strife but can even foster mutually enriching interactions, provided that persons, peoples, and civilizations let their distinctiveness be informed by sensitivity to what is highest in each. The way to avoid conflict is not for persons and societies to shed all traits that make them different from others and adopt a homogenous uni-culture, but for each to cultivate the best that it has to offer. In this manner universality and particularity can not merely co-exist, but enter into an enriching dynamic. They can, each in their own way, contribute to an evolving common human ground in which universality and particularity are brought together.

In 2000 he gave the Distinguished Foreign Scholar Lectures at Beijing University, which also published this lecture series in Chinese translation as a book, Unity Through Diversity (2001). He has lectured and published widely in China. In 2007 he gave a keynote address at the Chinese Academy of Social Science in Beijing. The Chinese edition (2007) of his book America the Virtuous became one of the most hotly discussed in China. Dushu, China's preeminent intellectual magazine, described it as "the kind of classical work that will be read over the generations." Three of his books and many of his articles have appeared in Chinese translation in China.

In 2012 Beijing Normal University named Ryn Honorary Professor.[8]

Students

Students he has mentored include:

  1. Walter Luttrull
  2. Samuel Sprunk
  3. Luke Sheahan, Duquesne University
  4. William S. Smith, Catholic University of America
  5. Emily Finley, Stanford University
  6. Joshua Bowman, Heidelberg University
  7. Nathanael Blake
  8. Oskar Chomicki
  9. Zhang Yuan, Beijing Normal University
  10. Coyle Neal, Southwest Baptist University
  11. Jay Starliper
  12. Nong Cheng
  13. William F. Byrne, St. John's University
  14. Laurence Reardon
  15. Carl Johan Ljungberg, author of several books
  16. Linda Raeder, author of John Stuart Mill and the Religion of Humanity
  17. Joseph Devaney
  18. Justin Garrison, Roanoke College, author of "'An Empire of Ideals': The Chimeric Imagination of Ronald Reagan"
  19. James Miclot
  20. James Boitano
  21. Patricia M. Lines
  22. Saleh Zahrany
  23. Gregory Ahern
  24. Gregory Cleva, author of Henry Kissinger and the American Approach to Foreign Policy
  25. Ryan Holston, Virginia Military Institute
  26. Michael P. Federici, East Tennessee State University, author of Eric Voegelin and The Challenge of Populism
  27. W. Wesley McDonald, Elizabethtown College, author of the definitive intellectual study of Russell Kirk, Russell Kirk and the Age of Ideology
  28. H. Lee Cheek, Jr., a leading scholar of American political thought, author of Calhoun and Popular Rule'
  29. Edward Hudgins, who has worked in think tanks including the Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute, and The Atlas Society.
  30. Charles R. Smith

Selected bibliography

The following is a partial list of Dr. Ryn's published works:

  • America the Virtuous: The Crisis of Democracy and the Quest for Empire (2003)
  • The New Jacobinism (1991; exp.ed. 2011)
  • Democracy and the Ethical Life: A Philosophy of Politics and Community (1978, exp. ed. 1990)
  • Will, Imagination and Reason: Babbitt, Croce and the Problem of Reality (1987, exp. ed. 1997)
  • A Common Human Ground: Universality and Particularity in a Multicultural World (2003, exp. ed. 2019)

References

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