Reflections on the Revolution in FranceHackett Publishing, 15 wrz 1987 - 288 John Pocock's edition of Burke's Reflections is two classics in one: Burke's Reflections and Pocock's reflections on Burke and the eighteenth century. |
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Strona ix
... England; he was educated in the Protestant stronghold of Trinity College, Dublin, and afterwards at the Inns of Court, the great law schools in London. He did not become a lawyer, but pursued ambitions as a man of letters and political ...
... England; he was educated in the Protestant stronghold of Trinity College, Dublin, and afterwards at the Inns of Court, the great law schools in London. He did not become a lawyer, but pursued ambitions as a man of letters and political ...
Strona xi
... England," and this must have puzzled its French readers; only after that does Burke turn to an examination of what the French have been doing to themselves. What may puzzle a modern reader is the limited extent to which the debate about ...
... England," and this must have puzzled its French readers; only after that does Burke turn to an examination of what the French have been doing to themselves. What may puzzle a modern reader is the limited extent to which the debate about ...
Strona xii
... England and had miraculously ended without civil war; but Locke still seems to have published in order to advocate a dissolution of government, in the sense that the Lords and Commons then sitting at Westminster should become a ...
... England and had miraculously ended without civil war; but Locke still seems to have published in order to advocate a dissolution of government, in the sense that the Lords and Commons then sitting at Westminster should become a ...
Strona xiii
Edmund Burke J. G. A. Pocock. and Sir William Blackstone in England” explicitly stated that Locke's Second Treatise was unacceptable as an account of what had happened in 1688–89, and the reading of the Revolution which Burke gives in ...
Edmund Burke J. G. A. Pocock. and Sir William Blackstone in England” explicitly stated that Locke's Second Treatise was unacceptable as an account of what had happened in 1688–89, and the reading of the Revolution which Burke gives in ...
Strona xvi
... England, he found a further reason to argue that both the American colonists and their English sympathisers were acting as Locke's disciples. He knew—as did Burke in 177539–that New England Congregationalism was producing in some cases ...
... England, he found a further reason to argue that both the American colonists and their English sympathisers were acting as Locke's disciples. He knew—as did Burke in 177539–that New England Congregationalism was producing in some cases ...
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