Pre-Revolutionary WritingsCambridge University Press, 3 jun 1993 - 328 páginas This is the first collection of the writings of Edmund Burke which precede Reflections on the Revolution in France, and the first to do justice to the connections and breadth of Burke's thought. A thinker whose range transcends formal boundaries, Burke has been highly prized by both conservatives and liberals, and this new edition charts the development of Burke's thought and its importance as a response to the events of his day. Burke's mind spanned theology, aesthetics, moral philosophy and history, as well as the political affairs of Ireland, England, America, India and France, and he united these concerns in his view of inequality. In the writings in this edition Burke indicated how societies embodying revealed religion and social hierarchy could sustain civilisation and political liberty. These thoughts reached their apogee in Reflections on the Revolution in France. This edition provides the student with all the necessary information for an understanding of the complexities of Burke's thought. Each text is prefaced by a summary and notes to the texts elucidate the literary and historical references. An introduction and biographical and bibliographical essays help place these works in the context of Burke's thought as a whole. |
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Página xvi
... equal to a wide range of concerns - theology , aesthetics , moral philosophy , history , political theory and public affairs a range which seems bewilderingly diverse to the cautious eyes of a later day . In fact , these interests were ...
... equal to a wide range of concerns - theology , aesthetics , moral philosophy , history , political theory and public affairs a range which seems bewilderingly diverse to the cautious eyes of a later day . In fact , these interests were ...
Página xxi
... equal Success for the Subversion of Government ' ( see below , p . 10 ) . Revelation and the social order were vulnerable to the same logic . Yet a fuller response required a further stage . Burke had still to rebut the view that social ...
... equal Success for the Subversion of Government ' ( see below , p . 10 ) . Revelation and the social order were vulnerable to the same logic . Yet a fuller response required a further stage . Burke had still to rebut the view that social ...
Página xxiii
... equal to understand- ing God's plan , let alone to criticizing it . Thus , Burke's initial allegiances and the way in which he arti- 13 A Letter to A Noble Lord ( 1796 ) , W , vi , p . 63f . culated them theoretically as responses to ...
... equal to understand- ing God's plan , let alone to criticizing it . Thus , Burke's initial allegiances and the way in which he arti- 13 A Letter to A Noble Lord ( 1796 ) , W , vi , p . 63f . culated them theoretically as responses to ...
Página xxx
... equal to his heart , and both were on a grand scale . He was also an Irish adventurer . Party politics took him a long way . He enjoyed the society he admired , as parliamentarian and privy counsellor ; for a period , when he ...
... equal to his heart , and both were on a grand scale . He was also an Irish adventurer . Party politics took him a long way . He enjoyed the society he admired , as parliamentarian and privy counsellor ; for a period , when he ...
Página 2
Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido..
Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido..
Índice
Extempore Commonplace on The Sermon of Our Saviour on the Mount | 1 |
Text | 3 |
A Vindication of Natural Society | 4 |
Analysis | 7 |
Text | 8 |
A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful | 58 |
Analysis | 61 |
Text | 63 |
Analysis | 114 |
Text | 116 |
Conciliation with America | 193 |
Analysis | 205 |
Text | 206 |
Almas Ali Khan | 270 |
Analysis | 275 |
Text | 277 |
Religion | 78 |
Analysis | 81 |
Text | 82 |
Tracts on the Popery Laws | 88 |
Analysis | 93 |
Text | 95 |
Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents | 103 |
Speech on the Army Estimates | 298 |
Analysis | 305 |
306 | |
321 | |
326 | |
Términos y frases comunes
Administration America amongst aristocracy army authority Bolingbroke British Burke's Bute Cabal cause character Civil List Colonies conduct connexion considered constitution Court Crown danger deism deists dependent Discontents duty East India Bill Edmund Burke effect elder Pitt empire England English evil executive faction favour Fox-North coalition France French Revolution George George Grenville George III Government Grenville History honourable House of Commons idea inequality influence interest Ireland king liberty Lord man's Mankind manner matter means ment mind Ministers ministry moral nation natural never object opinion pain Parliament Parliamentary party passions Paul Langford peace persons Philosophical Enquiry Pitt qv pleasure political popular present Prince principle proper question reason reign Religion revelation revenue Revolution shew society sort Speech spirit Tacitus taxes thing thought tion truth tyranny virtue Whigs whilst whole WSEB younger Pitt
Referencias a este libro
Modern Political Thinkers and Ideas: An Historical Introduction Tudor Jones No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2002 |
Modern Political Thinkers and Ideas: An Historical Introduction Tudor Jones Vista previa restringida - 2002 |