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Brooks Adams

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Occupation
  
historian

Role
  
Historian

Name
  
Brooks Adams


Spouse
  
Evelyn Davis

Nationality
  
American

Siblings
  
Henry Adams

Brooks Adams wwwcountercurrentscomwpcontentuploads20111

Died
  
February 13, 1927, Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Parents
  
Abigail Brown Brooks, Charles Francis Adams, Sr.

Grandparents
  
John Quincy Adams, Louisa Adams

Books
  
The Law of Civilization and Decay, The Theory of Social Revolutions, The Emancipation of Massa, The New Empire, America's Economic Supremacy

Similar People
  
Charles Francis Adams - Sr, Charles Francis Adams - Jr, Louisa Adams, John Quincy Adams, Norman Rosenthal

Biography of Henry Adams


Peter Chardon Brooks Adams (June 24, 1848 - February 13, 1927) was an American historian, political scientist and a critic of capitalism. Historian Robert Paxton has characterised Adams as a proto-fascist thinker.

Contents

Creative quotations from henry brooks adams for feb 16


Career overview

He graduated from Harvard University in 1870 and studied at Harvard Law School in 1870 and 1871. Adams believed that commercial civilizations rise and fall in predictable cycles. First, masses of people draw together in large population centers and engage in commercial activities. As their desire for wealth grows, they discard spiritual and creative values. Their greed leads to distrust and dishonesty, and eventually the society crumbles. In The Law of Civilization and Decay (1895), Adams noted that as new population centers emerged in the west, centers of world trade shifted from Constantinople to Venice to Amsterdam to London. He predicted in America's Economic Supremacy (1900) that New York would become the center of world trade. By 1918, Adams felt, in the words of Robert Paxton, that 'the remedy to American decline[was] in an authoritarian regime directing a state socialism'.

Adams was a great-grandson of John Adams, a grandson of John Quincy Adams, the youngest son of U.S. diplomat Charles Francis Adams, and brother to Henry Adams, philosopher, historian, and novelist, whose theories of history were influenced by his work. His maternal grandfather was Peter Chardon Brooks, the wealthiest man in Boston at the time of his death. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1918.

In 1889, Adams married Evelyn Davis, the daughter of Admiral Charles Henry Davis. They did not have children. Evelyn Davis's sister Anna was the wife of Henry Cabot Lodge. Her sister Louisa was the wife of John Dandridge Henley Luce, the son of Stephen Luce.

Works

  • The Emancipation of Massachusetts: The Dream and the Reality, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1919 [1st Pub. 1887].
  • The Gold Standard: An Historical Study, Alfred Mudge & Son, 1894.
  • The Law of Civilization and Decay: An Essay on History, The Macmillan Company, 1895.
  • America's Economic Supremacy, The Macmillan Co., 1900.
  • The New Empire, The Macmillan Company, 1902.
  • Railways as Public Agents: A Study in Sovereignty, Boston, 1910.
  • Theory of Social Revolutions, The Macmillan Company, 1913.
  • Essays

  • "The Spanish War and the Equilibrium of the World," The Forum 25 (6), August 1898.
  • "The New Struggle for Life Among Nations," McClure's Magazine 12 (6), April 1899.
  • "England's Decadence in the West Indies," The Forum, June 1899.
  • "War and Economic Competition," Scribner's 31 (3), March 1902.
  • "John Hay," McClure's Magazine 19 (2), June 1902.
  • "Legal Supervision of the Transportation Tax," The North American Review, September 1904.
  • "Nature of Law: Methods and Aim of Legal Education." In: Centralization and the Law: Scientific Legal Education. Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1906.
  • "Law Under Inequality: Monopoly." In: Centralization and the Law: Scientific Legal Education. Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1906.
  • "A Problem in Civilization," The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. CVI, 1910.
  • "The Collapse of Capitalistic Government," The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. CXI, 1913.
  • Other

  • Henry Adams, The Degradation of the Democratic Dogma, with an introduction by Brooks Adams. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1919.
  • References

    Brooks Adams Wikipedia