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Allan Bloom (1930-1992) taught philosophy and literature at Cornell University, Yale University, the University of Toronto, Tel Aviv University, École Normale Supérieure of Paris, and the University of Chicago during an academic career of nearly 40 years. At the age of 15, he entered a humanities program for gifted students at the University of Chicago, receiving a bachelor’s degree at 18. Bloom pursued post-graduate studies at the University of Chicago’s Committee on Social Thought, writing a doctoral thesis on the Greek philosopher and rhetorician Isocrates. His education instilled a passion for the classics and the “Great Books” tradition taught at the University of Chicago and other American liberal arts institutions in the middle of the 20th century; the purpose of such education was the Socratic goal of self-knowledge.
During his post-doctoral work, Bloom studied in Paris with the celebrated Hegelian philosopher Alexandre Kojève, whose seminars on Hegel’s The Phenomenology of Mind influenced many of the structuralist and post-structuralist thinkers of the succeeding era. Looking back at his early academic career in The Closing of the American Mind, Bloom remarks that he entered the university when the new language of value relativism, derived from German philosophy and transmitted to America largely by intellectuals fleeing the Nazi regime, was beginning to be assimilated into American academic circles.
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