Marcel De Corte was born in Belgium in 1905 and died in 1994. Philosopher, heir to the great Aristotelian tradition, contemporary of Jacques Maritain, Étienne Gilson, Gabriel Marcel, and Gustave Thibon, he taught at the University of Liège until 1975. Frequent contributor to the Catholic periodical, ""Itinéraires,"" and author of more than twenty works on philosophical reflection, he was notably interested in social evolutions that stem from the French and Industrial Revolutions, principally regarding the moral and social disintegration of modern man.
The eminent professor from Liège has diagnosed the condition of our Western civilization as grave. A philosopher of history and contemporary society, he does not hesitate to show us that our society is degenerating and everywhere our boats are leaking water....He observes a pronounced liking for abstraction, theory, ideology, and strings of concepts at a time when our lifestyle encourages gratification of material instincts. There is a latent conflict in the heart of man between these two contradictory tendencies which threatens the very existence of our civilization. -Jacques Decerf, in the Revue Philosophique de Louvain, 1950. De Corte discusses the principle errors of the modern world. His ""anti-modern stance""...refers to the importance he gives to tradition and to his radical criticism of pseudo-Christian progressivism, a most grave offense to human dignity and a path to mass society. Consequently he attacks all forms of modern statism, which takes away political liberty. De Corte holds that in modern thought morality no longer exists because it has ""exiled the truth."" Thus is born a new sophistry from which can only emerge materialism on the theoretical level and nihilism on the practical level. -Andrea Dalledonne in the journal Divus Thomas, 1976. This book, published in 1949, examines with acuity four major problems of late modernity in its postmodern metamorphosis: the conflict between spirit and life, the conflict between the political and the social, the relationship between technology and collectivism, and the tension between Christianity and modern civilisation. Themes De Corte further develops in his later works are already present in this essay, whose intent is to cover all the factors that point to the end of a civilisation. -Miguel Ayuso, Ph.D., Professor of Political Science and Constitutional Law, Comillas Pontifical University in Madrid