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The Assault on Reason

The Assault on Reason
Author: Al Gore
Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
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New (76) Used (140) Collectible (13) from $0.96

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 328 reviews
Sales Rank: 8320

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 320
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.2 x 1

ISBN: 0739484613
Dewey Decimal Number: 973.931
EAN: 9781594201226
ASIN: 1594201226

Publication Date: May 22, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Cover has some wear, first page (blank) has been torn out, otherwise, in great shape

Also Available In:

  • Audio CD - The Assault on Reason
  • Audio Download - The Assault on Reason (Unabridged)
  • Kindle Edition - The Assault On Reason
  • Paperback - The Assault on Reason
  • Audio CD - The Assault on Reason
  • Hardcover - The Assault on Reason (Thorndike Press Large Print Basic Series)
  • Paperback - The Assault on Reason (Large Print Press)

Similar Items:

  • Earth in the Balance: Ecology and the Human Spirit
  • A Tragic Legacy: How a Good vs. Evil Mentality Destroyed the Bush Presidency
  • An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global Warming
  • Broken Government: How Republican Rule Destroyed the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches
  • It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the Age of Bush

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
The first question many people ask when hearing of a new book from Al Gore is, "Is it about the environment?" The answer is yes, but it's not (or, rather, not only) the kind of environment he wrote about in Earth in the Balance and of course painted such a vivid picture of in his Oscar-winning documentary (and companion book), An Inconvenient Truth. It's the political environment he's concerned about in The Assault on Reason: the way we debate and decide on the critical issues of the day. In an account that balances theoretical discussion of the foundations of democracy with a lacerating critique of the Bush administration, Gore argues that the marketplace of reasoned debate our country was founded on is being endangered by a variety of allied forces: the use of fear and the misuse of faith, the distractions of our entertainment culture, and the concentrations of power in the national media and the executive branch. In his essay and answers to our questions below, he introduces the crisis he sees, as well as the opportunity for its solution he envisions in the open forums of the Internet.

A Message from Al Gore to Amazon.com Readers

I've dedicated my book, The Assault on Reason, to my father, Senator Albert Gore Sr., the bravest politician I've ever known. In the 1970 mid-term elections, President Richard Nixon relied on a campaign of fear to consolidate his power. I was in the military at the time, on my way to Vietnam as an army journalist, and I watched as my father was accused of being unpatriotic because he was steadfast in his opposition to the War--and as he was labeled an atheist because he dared to oppose a constitutional amendment to foster government-sponsored prayer in the public schools. The 1970 campaign is now regarded by political historians as a watershed, marking a sharp decline in the tone of our national discourse--a decline that has only worsened in recent years as fear has become a more powerful political tool than trust, public consumption of entertainment has dramatically surpassed that of serious news, and blind faith has proven more potent than truth.

We are at a pivotal moment in American democracy. The persistent and sustained reliance on falsehoods as the basis of policy, even in the face of evidence to the contrary, has reached levels that were previously unimaginable. It's too easy and too partisan to simply place the blame on the policies of President George W. Bush. We are all responsible for the decisions our country makes.

Reasoned, focused discourse is vital to our democracy to ensure a well-informed citizenry. But this is difficult in an environment in which we are experiencing a new pattern of serial obsessions that periodically take over the airwaves for weeks at a time--from the O.J. Simpson and Michael Jackson trials to Paris Hilton and Anna Nicole Smith.

Never has it been more vital for us to face the reality of our long-term challenges, from the climate crisis to the war in Iraq to the deficits and health and social welfare. Today, reason is under assault by forces using sophisticated techniques such as propaganda, psychology, and electronic mass media. Yet, democracy's advocates are beginning to use their own sophisticated techniques: the Internet, online organizing, blogs, and wikis. Although the challenges we face are great, I am more confident than ever before that democracy will prevail and that the American people are rising to the challenge of reinvigorating self-government. It is my great hope that those who read my book will choose to become part of a new movement to rekindle the true spirit of America.

Questions for Al Gore

Amazon.com:Of all I've read and seen on climate change, I don't think anything has had quite the impact on me that those vivid maps of shrinking coastlines did in An Inconvenient Truth. You've spent years trying to communicate the threat of climate change and you've learned how to use compelling images to tell that story, but in this book you're very wary of the power of visual images to overwhelm reason with fear. How do you spur people to action in a crisis like this without using fear?

Gore: I often open the slideshow by talking about the "climate crisis." The English meaning of the word "crisis" conveys alarm, but the Chinese and Japanese expressions use two characters together: the first means danger, but the second means opportunity. The animations do help to convey some of that sense of danger--but the opportunities are enormous. We are beginning to see companies taking advantage of the new markets that are emerging as they innovate and put to market the technologies that we need to solve this crisis. Some have become ubiquitous, like the hybrid electric engine and compact fluorescent light bulb. There are thousands of opportunities like this all around us if governments will show the type of bold leadership that we need--and work with industry to exploit these opportunities.

Amazon.com: You describe two problems with television culture: it's a top-down system in which, as you say, "Individuals receive, but they cannot send," and its physiological vividness allows it to bypass our reason. The user-created communities that seem so promising on the Internet would seem to solve the first problem, but what about the second?

Gore: There are a number of barriers for individuals who want to communicate over TV. The major networks won't give average Americans a voice, and it is virtually impossible to start a channel. One solution, that I have worked on with my partner, Joel Hyatt, is the creation of Current TV, where viewers can submit content over the Internet to air on the channel.

With regards to the Internet, anyone with access to a computer and broadband can create a website or blog and post content. They can send information into the public forum. Of course, we need to continue to work to bridge the digital divide, to ensure that we expand the access of people to the Internet, but the threshold for entry is much lower than that of television.

Amazon.com: You're the chairman of Current TV, the interactive cable channel aimed at young people. Can you talk about the challenges of constructing a platform where the kind of substantive dialogue you are looking for can take place?

Gore: One of the things I talk about in the book is infotainment--the "well-amused" audience that is bombarded with the latest programming about O.J. Simpson, or JonBenet Ramsey, or Anna Nicole Smith. What we are trying to do, in part, is to provide a public forum for viewers to submit content about issues of concern to them. And they have, by the thousands, on issues from the war in Iraq to the environment to education and others. I am continually amazed by both the quality of the submissions and the breadth and depth of the subject matter.

Amazon.com: You have a chapter on the importance of checks and balances in government (in a sense, that's what the whole book is about), and we're seeing the effect that active oversight from Congress is having right now. For most of your eight years in office, you and Bill Clinton had to work with a Republican Congress. I'm sure that at times (say, 1998) that had its frustrations, but do you think it was valuable to have that balance, or did it prevent you from doing what you came into office to do?

Gore: Checks and balances are vital to the functioning of our system of government. Of course it can have its frustrations, but the Founders intended that we have a system whereby no one branch has too much control over the others. Ultimately, it is up to voters to decide the control of Congress and the White House and then for elected officials to work to serve the public interest and to try to implement policies that serve the country. These are core values that are at the heart of who we are as a nation.

Amazon.com: I wanted to ask about the Office of the Vice President. I think it's safe to say that the last two vice presidents, you and Dick Cheney, have been the most powerful and influential in our history. Why do you think that is?

Gore: I think the answer is very different in the two administrations, but in a world that is truly globalized, with a broader information ecology, with challenges ranging from a more complex system of international issues ranging from the climate crisis to asymmetric attacks, it is not a surprise that a President might choose to draw upon more advice from the office of the vice president than in the past. This is a trend that I would expect to continue under future presidents, as the range of the demands on the presidency will not diminish over time.



Product Description
A visionary analysis of how the politics of fear, secrecy, cronyism, and blind faith has combined with the degration of the public sphere to create an environment dangerously hostile to reason

At the time George W. Bush ordered American forces to invade Iraq, 70 percent of Americans believed Saddam Hussein was linked to 9/11. Voters in Ohio, when asked by pollsters to list what stuck in their minds about the campaign, most frequently named two Bush television ads that played to fears of terrorism.

We live in an age when the thirty-second television spot is the most powerful force shaping the electorate's thinking, and America is in the hands of an administration less interested than any previous administration in sharing the truth with the citizenry. Related to this and of even greater concern is this administration's disinterest in the process by which the truth is ascertained, the tenets of fact-based reasoning-first among them an embrace of open inquiry in which unexpected and even inconvenient facts can lead to unexpected conclusions.

How did we get here? How much damage has been done to the functioning of our democracy and its role as steward of our security? Never has there been a worse time for us to lose the capacity to face the reality of our long-term challenges, from national security to the economy, from issues of health and social welfare to the environment. As The Assault on Reason shows us, we have precious little time to waste.

Gore's larger goal in this book is to explain how the public sphere itself has evolved into a place hospitable to reason's enemies, to make us more aware of the forces at work on our own minds, and to lead us to an understanding of what we can do, individually and collectively, to restore the rule of reason and safeguard our future. Drawing on a life's work in politics as well as on the work of experts across a broad range of disciplines, Al Gore has written a farsighted and powerful manifesto for clear thinking.



Customer Reviews:   Read 323 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The latest of the "new Al Gores"   July 26, 2008
Mr. Gore, has done nothing if not gone about distinguishing himself by other means since his ignominious lost to current President George W. Bush Jr. As if continuing to say to us all "See, I told you so?" Gore has written a very thoughtful and wide-ranging book the subtext of which is that our government no longer works for, but against, individual freedoms.

Exhibit one is control of the media by a handful of wealthy oligarchs. What we are offered up, according to Gore, is a media that, on the one hand, give us a steady diet of mindless one-way infomercials, disguised as entertainment; and on the other, a daily droning of "the politics of fear." It is difficult to disagree with Gore's main thesis: that a mindless entertainment-oriented media, coupled with the politics of fear centered on preparations for the next war -- owned and controlled by a handful of oligarchs -- are a lethal combination for a robust and active democracy. His solution is the "breakout" freedoms offered by the internet, pulling an end run around these "would-be" media tyrants and mind control freaks who engineer consensus and consent by fiat.

Exhibit number two is complacency: first by the American public, and then by our elected officials and the various branches of our government, including especially the current President of the U.S. Although his scathing criticism of Bush falls just short of bad taste (to openly criticize the man who defeated you with such passion), nevertheless it is again difficult to disagree with Gore's "no-holds-bar" excoriation of GW Bush's incompetence Presidency and the way it has made a shambles of the U.S. over the last seven and a half years. But here it must be said that Gore must get in line, because his pointed critique of Bush is just one of many. However, coming from a much more sober-minded and relax Al Gore, this critique of Bush has a strong impact and a much deeper resonance, one that artfully brackets the overarching theme and warning of the book: That if we don't begin to defend our democracy more rigorously against the likes of GW Bush and his monied friends, we are going to lose it.

However, this is not the best part of the book. The best part is that in critiquing GW and our society's dysfunction, Gore gets to flex his own considerable intellectual muscles. By placing all of this in a philosophical context, where he uses and cites a whole range of philosophers both old and new, the ex-Vice President shows us yet another deeper side of the milquetoast Al Gore we saw during the 2000 election cycle. One would like to think that had one of these "other Al Gores" showed up during the run up to the 2000 election, rather than the one Donna Brazil "stage-managed" into a lost, that he would have become our president, rather than the embarrassment that we now have holding the office. And then perhaps the U.S. would not be in the mess it is in now.

But that is just more water under the proverbial bridge. Five Stars



5 out of 5 stars A Democrat with guts.   July 2, 2008
Al Gore has matched his slide show turned movie with another justified kick in the our numb American ankle. Finally a Democrat has made a clear and responsible condemnation of the Bush administration. Here's a guy standing up and pointing his finger and saying what we all see. Reading his book is more than a feel-good read or hearing a preacher shout to the choir. It's more generative of the feeling: "Hey, are we allowed to write such things? In America?"

Gore does start off stating he is invested in some kind of interactive TV business, and ends his book hoping the Internet will solve everything, so you won't see a startling solution, but this is required reading for liberals and other non-elites. If only for the message "Yes, even in America!"



5 out of 5 stars ASTOUNDING: A SEMINAL WORK FOR OUR TIME   June 27, 2008
President-elect Al Gore finally shares his views on how and why America went wrong in accepting the gop incompetents. A relief to read after the lies / spin garbage that has emited from the White House / P-NAC people for so long.


3 out of 5 stars Oh man, so boring.   June 24, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

These rebukes to the Bush administration might have been brave in 2003 or 2005 but published in 2007 it just seems so lame. Like someone stepping out of a crowd after a fight to taunt the loser as he walks away.


5 out of 5 stars Excellent and Informative Book   June 20, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I was skeptical about this book when I first got it. However, after reading it, I found it to be very well-written, informative, and extremely inspirational. Gore's book has helped renew my interest in our political process and I would recommend it to any American regardless of whether they are on the left, right, or anywhere in between.

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