"In God We Trust": The Religious Beliefs and Ideas of the American Founding FathersNorman Cousins Harper, 1958 - 464 Seiten This book is about the religious beliefs and personal philosophies of the small company of young men who founded the new nation that called itself the United States of America. Much is known about their political ideas--but what about their own articles of faith and individual philosophies? This question has served as the basis for speculation and often conflicting theory, especially in connection with recurring issues facing the American people. This is the first time these materials have been brought together into a single source. In these pages they speak their minds; they also speak to the spiritual concerns of our own time. Norman Cousins has examined literally thousands of letters, personal diaries and official pronouncements in making the selections for this book. As part of each chapter, he has also written an essay on the education and general background of each man.--From publisher description. |
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Seite 30
... virtue , by clearing suc- cessively my lines of their spots , till in the end , by a number of courses , I should be happy in viewing a clean book , after a thirteen weeks ' daily examination . This my little book had for its motto ...
... virtue , by clearing suc- cessively my lines of their spots , till in the end , by a number of courses , I should be happy in viewing a clean book , after a thirteen weeks ' daily examination . This my little book had for its motto ...
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... VIRTUE , 2 because it would have shown the means and manner of obtain- ing virtue , which would have distinguished it from the mere exhortation to be good , that does not instruct and indicate the means , but is like the apostle's man ...
... VIRTUE , 2 because it would have shown the means and manner of obtain- ing virtue , which would have distinguished it from the mere exhortation to be good , that does not instruct and indicate the means , but is like the apostle's man ...
Seite 142
... virtue , then , must have had some other foundation than the love of God . The Tò kaλóv [ virtue ] of others is founded in a different faculty , that of taste , which is not even a branch of morality . We have indeed an innate sense of ...
... virtue , then , must have had some other foundation than the love of God . The Tò kaλóv [ virtue ] of others is founded in a different faculty , that of taste , which is not even a branch of morality . We have indeed an innate sense of ...
Inhalt
THE RESPONSIVE MEN | 1 |
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN | 16 |
GEORGE WASHINGTON | 44 |
Urheberrecht | |
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