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PARTISAN REVIEW
tended unity of truth, leave the pursuit of an over-all consistency to
science, take other lines of growth and, in brief, adopt Dominion
status. I do not imagine, though, that these reflections will have
much practical weight-with those who think they acknowledge
only one sort of truth. But there are others who will say that there is
nothing new in all this; and that my recommendations only recognize
immemorial and all but universal human practice. That is what I have
been endeavoring to do.
(The symposium on "Religion and the Intellectuals" will be
continued in forthcoming issues, with contributions from A.
].
Ayer,
R. P. Blackmur, George Boas, James Burnham, Robert Gorham Davis,
James T. Farrell, Sidney Hook, Irving Howe, Paul Kecskemeti,
Dwight Macdonald, Jacques Maritain, H.
B.
Parkes, Meyer Schapiro,
Allen Tate, Paul Tillich, and the editors of PRo
Readers are invited to comment on the symposium and its
implications in the Correspondence columns of the magazine.)