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 viii
... kind. It was written in order to defend an English political system—the rule of Britain and Ireland by the monarchy and aristocracy of the eighteenthcentury Whigs—and its “conservative” arguments were based on those which that system ...
... kind. It was written in order to defend an English political system—the rule of Britain and Ireland by the monarchy and aristocracy of the eighteenthcentury Whigs—and its “conservative” arguments were based on those which that system ...
Strona x
... talent; he feared the rise of a revolutionary intelligentsia, made up of the kind of man he might easily have been himself. (iii) The foundations of the regime Burke served and defended REFLECTIONS ON THE REVOLUTION IN FRANCE.
... talent; he feared the rise of a revolutionary intelligentsia, made up of the kind of man he might easily have been himself. (iii) The foundations of the regime Burke served and defended REFLECTIONS ON THE REVOLUTION IN FRANCE.
Strona xxi
... kind of tyranny over property itself. In an age where social personality seemed to depend upon property, that was a frightening prospect; a threat to the coherence of the mind itself, and the universe which it perceived. The Scottish ...
... kind of tyranny over property itself. In an age where social personality seemed to depend upon property, that was a frightening prospect; a threat to the coherence of the mind itself, and the universe which it perceived. The Scottish ...
Strona xxvii
... kind of parliamentary reform. A theory of civil society based on a radical equality of rights must offer a radical explanation of the Revolution of 1688–89; and Price, no less than Burke, saw the events in France a hundred years later ...
... kind of parliamentary reform. A theory of civil society based on a radical equality of rights must offer a radical explanation of the Revolution of 1688–89; and Price, no less than Burke, saw the events in France a hundred years later ...
Strona xxxi
... kind of ritual decapitation of which there had been several instances since July 14. The crowd, and the national guardsmen with them, obliged the royal family to accompany them to Paris, and the Assembly, which had refused to offer the ...
... kind of ritual decapitation of which there had been several instances since July 14. The crowd, and the national guardsmen with them, obliged the royal family to accompany them to Paris, and the Assembly, which had refused to offer the ...
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ancient appear army authority become believe better body Burke Burke's called cause church citizens civil clergy common concerning conduct confiscation consider considerable constitution continued course crown destroy direct effect election England English equal establishment estates evil existence fear follow force France French give given hands held House human ideas individuals interest kind king kingdom landed least less liberty manners means ment mind monarchy moral National Assembly nature never object observe opinion Paris perhaps persons political possessed practice present Press Price principles produce question reason Reflections regard religion render republic respect Revolution rule scheme seems sense society sort spirit succession taken things thought tion true University virtue wealth Whig whilst whole wish