In The Promise of American Life, Herbert Croly argued that
A) the United States needed an activist government that would serve all citizens.
B) concepts such as democracy, nationalism, and individualism had no relevance in Modern America.
C) engineers, because of the stern discipline of their profession, were better fitted to lead society than the business class.
D) the theory of evolution through "survival of the fittest" supported an ideology of unrestrained economic competition.
E) the central dynamic of American history was not the actions of Washington policy makers, but the social and political experience of generations of western pioneers.