Abstract

Nature's Man: Thomas Jefferson's Philosophical Anthropology. By Maurizio Valsania. (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2013. Pp. 204. Cloth, $35.00.)Reviewed by Lorri GloverIn Nature's Man, Maurizio Valsania offers a nuanced and theoretically sophisticated exploration of Thomas Jefferson's ideas about human nature, the qualities he idealized in individuals, and the importance of community to that worldview-his philosophical anthropology. In just over 150 pages of text, the work manages to link a stunning range of topics without ever feeling forced or fleeting. The three chapters read like an extended essay, weaving together what often can seem like disparate pieces to Jefferson's long career and varied writings to give a fresh take on one of the most-studied people in American history.Valsania clearly has a strong command of Jefferson's writings and ideas, and this book is written with confidence and verve. The author is equally adept when contemplating Jefferson's views on women and Native Americans as he is in discussions of Jefferson's land policies while president and attitudes toward equality and equal rights. offers novel insight on often-read Jefferson writings, including, most notably, his head and heart letter to Maria Cosway, A Summary View on the Rights of British America, and the long-delayed, much-celebrated campaign for disestablishment in Virginia, predicated on Jefferson's 1779 proposal to the Virginia legislature. In the latter case, Valsania convinces the reader that, taken with Jefferson's other legislative efforts that year, the Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom captures Jefferson's distinctive perception of the individual in community, an effort at privileging individuals over their community, and thus underscores the differences between our world and his. Valsania also presents a reinterpretation of Jefferson's retirement years and what has often been seen as a narrowing of his worldview after leaving the presidency. Age and parochialism are over-argued, Valsania maintains; rather, Jefferson's increasing localism derived from a judicious re-evaluation of political and economic circumstances, characteristic of his enduring experimental temper (70).Embedded in that last interpretation is a thread running through the book: Valsania's seeming admiration for Jefferson. Several times throughout these chapters, the reader is cautioned against dismissing Jefferson as an inconsistent hypocrite. But how many serious scholars-the audience for the book-would contemplate making such a bald, ahistorical judgment? Moreover, Valsania insists that his intent is not to perform a moral evaluation of Jefferson's character, to condemn or acquit him. But in the same paragraph, after considering Jefferson's conduct while governor of Virginia and president of the United States, Valsania writes: He was eminently principled, responsible, and coherent. never acted randomly or for a personal or momentary interest (113).While readers will likely quarrel with that sanguine appraisal, they will also have to be impressed with the sensitivity with which Valsania reads only Jefferson's texts but his context, too. …

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