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
... questions must affect our understanding of the Reflections as “philosophic conservatism,” since the “philosophic” debate between the conservative and revolutionary arguments can take place in many historical contexts and the ...
... questions must affect our understanding of the Reflections as “philosophic conservatism,” since the “philosophic” debate between the conservative and revolutionary arguments can take place in many historical contexts and the ...
Strona xiv
... question how far the memory of 1776 weighed with Burke and his readers in 1789; but the question is easier to ask than to answer. Burke had been parliamentary agent for the colony of New York and, in his speeches and actions during the ...
... question how far the memory of 1776 weighed with Burke and his readers in 1789; but the question is easier to ask than to answer. Burke had been parliamentary agent for the colony of New York and, in his speeches and actions during the ...
Strona xvi
... question of the relation of Whig aristocracy to modern commerce; but as a clergyman of the Church of England, he found a further reason to argue that both the American colonists and their English sympathisers were acting as Locke's ...
... question of the relation of Whig aristocracy to modern commerce; but as a clergyman of the Church of England, he found a further reason to argue that both the American colonists and their English sympathisers were acting as Locke's ...
Strona xvii
... question posed to the Church by the Revolution, when it saw the King who was its supreme head and governor replaced against its will by secular political action. Was the Church in England a mere extension of the ruling order, as some of ...
... question posed to the Church by the Revolution, when it saw the King who was its supreme head and governor replaced against its will by secular political action. Was the Church in England a mere extension of the ruling order, as some of ...
Strona xx
... question, which found expression in what we now know as the “republican” thesis of government.” According to the humanist values of an age which assiduously studied the classics, the moral health of a political society depended upon ...
... question, which found expression in what we now know as the “republican” thesis of government.” According to the humanist values of an age which assiduously studied the classics, the moral health of a political society depended upon ...
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