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The Education of Henry Adams
Henry Adams
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The Education of Henry Adams
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A prominent and caustic historian reflects on the reasons that “the more he was educated, the less he understood,” and what he believes the future holds for American society.

Language
English
ISBN
Unknown
Titlepage
Imprint
Editor’s Preface
Preface
The Education of Henry Adams
I: Quincy (1838–1848)
II: Boston (1848–1854)
III: Washington (1850–1854)
IV: Harvard College (1854–1858)
V: Berlin (1858–1859)
VI: Rome (1859–1860)
VII: Treason (1860–1861)
VIII: Diplomacy (1861)
IX: Foes or Friends (1862)
X: Political Morality (1862)
XI: The Battle of the Rams (1863)
XII: Eccentricity (1863)
XIII: The Perfection of Human Society (1864)
XIV: Dilettantism (1865–1866)
XV: Darwinism (1867–1868)
XVI: The Press (1868)
XVII: President Grant (1869)
XVIII: Free Fight (1869–1870)
XIX: Chaos (1870)
XX: Failure (1871)
XXI: Twenty Years After (1892)
XXII: Chicago (1893)
XXIII: Silence (1894–1898)
XXIV: Indian Summer (1898–1899)
XXV: The Dynamo and the Virgin (1900)
XXVI: Twilight (1901)
XXVII: Teufelsdröckh (1901)
XXVIII: The Height of Knowledge (1902)
XXIX: The Abyss of Ignorance (1902)
XXX: Vis Inertiae (1903)
XXXI: The Grammar of Science (1903)
XXXII: Vis Nova (1903–1904)
XXXIII: A Dynamic Theory of History (1904)
XXXIV: A Law of Acceleration (1904)
XXXV: Nunc Age (1905)
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