Despite the loss of its leading socialist intellectuals, the Socialist League went forward.
Since the 1960s, he has become known more widely as a political dissident, an anarchist, and a libertarian socialist intellectual.
He worked as a journalist in the 1890s, and took an active role in discussions among liberal and socialist intellectuals.
Following a long campaign of socialist and communist-minded intellectuals, he was eventually amnestied in 1934.
With its famed small, red booklet, it was the key forum of expression for leftist, socialist intellectuals during the Weimar Republic.
Taylor's methods have also been challenged by socialist intellectuals.
In May 1945, liberalists and moderate socialist intellectuals selected him as a South Korean candidate for presidency, but he was declined.
As a university student, he became acquainted with many talented socialist intellectuals.
A prominent socialist intellectual, he became one of the Labour Party's leading Zionists and anti-communists.
Neo-conservatism represented a disaffection on the part of some former socialist intellectuals, and some conservative politicians, with the failures of the welfare state.