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  1. Career. Lippmann in 1914, shortly after the establishment of The New Republic. Lippmann was a journalist, a media critic and an amateur philosopher who tried to reconcile the tensions between liberty and democracy in a complex and modern world, as in his 1920 book Liberty and the News.

  2. Aug 9, 2018 · Walter Lippmann’s Public Opinion, published in 1922, is the most persuasive critique of democracy I’ve ever read. Shortly after it was published, John Dewey, the great defender of democracy and the...

  3. In what is widely considered the most influential book ever written by Walter Lippmann, the late journalist and social critic provides a fundamental treatise on the nature of human information...

  4. Walter Lippmann set an unmatched standard for a journalist interpreting (and leavening) expert opinion to newspaper readers in the middle third of the twentieth century. He introduced Keynesian macroeconomics to the generation of the New Deal but never lost interest in markets themselves.

  5. Aug 4, 2019 · Drawing on the pioneering psychologist William James’s lovely landmark formulation of a baby’s first perception of the world as “one great blooming, buzzing confusion,” Lippmann writes: Few facts in consciousness seem to be merely given.

  6. Feb 2, 2023 · By engaging with Wallas, James Bryce, William James, and many others, Lippmann built his conceptual vocabulary of “pseudo-environments” and “stereotypes” to explain how modern citizens formed opinions and shaped political outcomes.

  7. A great admirer of Theodore Roosevelt and later of Woodrow Wilson, Lippmann was one of the first American intellectuals and journalists to call for American intervention in World War I. When the United States finally entered the conflict, Lippmann began to work for the government.