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
... perhaps this is why he was often caricatured as a Jesuit by political cartoonists. However, he was a baptized member of the Church of Ireland and a vehement defender of the Church of England; he was educated in the Protestant stronghold ...
... perhaps this is why he was often caricatured as a Jesuit by political cartoonists. However, he was a baptized member of the Church of Ireland and a vehement defender of the Church of England; he was educated in the Protestant stronghold ...
Strona xv
... Perhaps the two most remarkable English commentators on the American Revolution are Richard Price” and Josiah Tucker,” and the relation of each to Burke is worth study. In 1777 Price published a strongly pro-American work called ...
... Perhaps the two most remarkable English commentators on the American Revolution are Richard Price” and Josiah Tucker,” and the relation of each to Burke is worth study. In 1777 Price published a strongly pro-American work called ...
Strona xxii
... perhaps a critic of Smith and the Scottish economists, was less perturbed.* It was one of his strengths as a parliamentarian that he diligently studied governmental data on the finances and really knew what was going on there; and we ...
... perhaps a critic of Smith and the Scottish economists, was less perturbed.* It was one of his strengths as a parliamentarian that he diligently studied governmental data on the finances and really knew what was going on there; and we ...
Strona xxviii
... (perhaps on millenarian grounds) that “fall of the civil powers” which Priestley had said might be the necessary prelude to disestablishment. (ix) Burke had no doctrinaire desire to impose the landowning Church of England on other ...
... (perhaps on millenarian grounds) that “fall of the civil powers” which Priestley had said might be the necessary prelude to disestablishment. (ix) Burke had no doctrinaire desire to impose the landowning Church of England on other ...
Strona xxxiv
... perhaps the less durable image. This may be the moment at which to point out that this Introduction makes no attempt to tell the true story of the French Revolution, or to offer criticism of Burke's account of it; we are concerned ...
... perhaps the less durable image. This may be the moment at which to point out that this Introduction makes no attempt to tell the true story of the French Revolution, or to offer criticism of Burke's account of it; we are concerned ...
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