Reflections on the Revolution in FranceYale University Press, 1 paź 2008 - 368 The most enduring work of its time, Reflections on the Revolution in France was written in 1790 and has remained in print ever since. Edmund Burke’s analysis of revolutionary change established him as the chief framer of modern European conservative political thought. This outstanding new edition of the Reflections presents Burke’s famous text along with a historical introduction by Frank M. Turner and four lively critical essays by leading scholars. The volume sets the Reflections in the context of Western political thought, highlights its ongoing relevance to contemporary debates, and provides abundant critical notes, a glossary, and a glossary-index to ensure its accessibility. Contributors to the book examine various provocative aspects of Burke’s thought. Conor Cruise O’Brien explores Burke’s hostility to “theory,” Darrin McMahon considers Burke’s characterization of the French Enlightenment, Jack Rakove contrasts the views of Burke and American constitutional framers on the process of drawing up constitutions, and Alan Wolfe investigates Burke, the Social Sciences, and liberal democracy. |
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... Religion and NationalisminIreland (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995),The LongAffair: Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution, 1785–1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1998), and Memoir: My Life and Themes (New York ...
... Religion and NationalisminIreland (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995),The LongAffair: Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution, 1785–1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1998), and Memoir: My Life and Themes (New York ...
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... religious ideals.Hisis the voice of the convincedliberal presentinghimself as confrontingadark, dangerous, and ultimately deadly radicalism thathas hijackedthe vocabulary of political liberty. Consequently,Burke mustrepeatedly define ...
... religious ideals.Hisis the voice of the convincedliberal presentinghimself as confrontingadark, dangerous, and ultimately deadly radicalism thathas hijackedthe vocabulary of political liberty. Consequently,Burke mustrepeatedly define ...
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... religion organizes his polemical strategy around the denunciation ofan English Protestant Dissenting minister who ... religious and racialtoleration andthe desire for social conformity.3 He argues thatwe mustrecognize thatno matter how ...
... religion organizes his polemical strategy around the denunciation ofan English Protestant Dissenting minister who ... religious and racialtoleration andthe desire for social conformity.3 He argues thatwe mustrecognize thatno matter how ...
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... religious discrimination. Many,including Price, voicedtheir demands in the languageof universal rights rootedin Enlightenment philosophy and rhetoric. Consequently, in their politicalagenda the language of political radicalism and religious ...
... religious discrimination. Many,including Price, voicedtheir demands in the languageof universal rights rootedin Enlightenment philosophy and rhetoric. Consequently, in their politicalagenda the language of political radicalism and religious ...
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... religion. Long determined to expand religious and political liberty inEngland, helooked opportunistically tothe French Revolution asan occasion tovoice political complaints and aspirations for radicalreform in Britain, much ashe and ...
... religion. Long determined to expand religious and political liberty inEngland, helooked opportunistically tothe French Revolution asan occasion tovoice political complaints and aspirations for radicalreform in Britain, much ashe and ...
Spis treści
Edmund Burke | |
A Tale of Two Enlightenments | |
DarrinM McMahon Why American Constitutionalism Worked | |
Reflections on Burkes | |
Suggested Readings | |
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