An Imaginative Whig: Reassessing the Life and Thought of Edmund BurkeIan Crowe University of Missouri Press, 2005 - 247 Seiten This collection of essays shifts the focus of scholarly debate away from the themes that have traditionally dominated the study of Edmund Burke. In the past, largely ideology-based or highly textual studies have tended to paint Burke as a "prophet" or "precursor" of movements as diverse as conservatism, political pragmatism, and romanticism. In contrast, these essays address prominent issues in contemporary society--multiculturalism, the impact of postmodern and relativist methodologies, the boundaries of state-church relationships, and religious tolerance in modern societies--by emphasizing Burke's earlier career and writings and focusing on his position on historiography, moral philosophy, jurisprudence, aesthetics, and philosophical skepticism. The essays in this collection, written by some of today's most renowned Burke scholars, will radically challenge our deeply rooted assumptions about Burke, his thought, and his place in the history of Western political philosophy. |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 61
Seite 3
... later colonial and antirevolutionary thought . It presents an unsettling challenge to the picture of Burke as an anti - Enlightenment founder of modern conser- vatism , a precursor of Francophobe — even Europhobe — English national- ism ...
... later colonial and antirevolutionary thought . It presents an unsettling challenge to the picture of Burke as an anti - Enlightenment founder of modern conser- vatism , a precursor of Francophobe — even Europhobe — English national- ism ...
Seite 5
... later years. Burke's Reflections is a work of such profound insights that it will continue to offer exciting responses to the challenges of the day. At the same time, as our own contemporary pre- occupations shift from direct ...
... later years. Burke's Reflections is a work of such profound insights that it will continue to offer exciting responses to the challenges of the day. At the same time, as our own contemporary pre- occupations shift from direct ...
Seite 6
... later , after an acrimonious break with his employer ( the causes of which appear to confirm his continuing ambitions to succeed as an independent writer ) , Burke was fortunate to be appointed private secretary to the great Whig ...
... later , after an acrimonious break with his employer ( the causes of which appear to confirm his continuing ambitions to succeed as an independent writer ) , Burke was fortunate to be appointed private secretary to the great Whig ...
Seite 7
... later that his intellectual principles were already formed by the time he entered the House of Commons. His career and education had already provided his views about human nature and society, religion and civil order, with a rigorous ...
... later that his intellectual principles were already formed by the time he entered the House of Commons. His career and education had already provided his views about human nature and society, religion and civil order, with a rigorous ...
Seite 11
... Later, in his preface to A Vindication of Natural So- ciety (included in the second edition of 1757), Burke scorned a “Fairy Land of Philosophy,” where sophists manipulated the imagination of their audi- ences to create confusion and ...
... Later, in his preface to A Vindication of Natural So- ciety (included in the second edition of 1757), Burke scorned a “Fairy Land of Philosophy,” where sophists manipulated the imagination of their audi- ences to create confusion and ...
Inhalt
Burke and Religion | 19 |
Burke and the Argument from Human Nature | 37 |
Burkes Conservatism | 59 |
Burke India and Orientalism | 127 |
The Law the Nun and Edmund Burke | 158 |
Burke and the Conundrum of International Human Rights | 175 |
Edmund Burke and the Thomistic Foundations of Natural | 203 |
About the Contributors | 241 |
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An Imaginative Whig: Reassessing the Life and Thought of Edmund Burke Ian Crowe Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2005 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action American Revolution appeared Aquinas argues argument Asia asserted believed Britain British Burke Newsletter Burke’s Burke’s view Cambridge Catholic charter Chatham Chathamites Christian Church circumstances civil claim colonies common conservatism constitution Correspondence critical cultures Declaratory Act despotism discourse Dissenters doctrine duties East India Edmund Burke eighteenth-century empire England English essay European French Revolution Hindu human nature Ibid idea imagination imperial intellectual Ireland Irish J. C. D. Clark jurisprudence knowledge legislative Letter liberty London Lord Maritain metaphysics mind modern moral Nano Nagle nations natural law natural rights Observations Orientalism Orientalist Oxford Parliament particular passage position practical principles prudence Quebec Act reason Reflections reform religion religious repeal Richard Price Rockingham Russell Kirk Said's scholars sense Shelburne slavery slaves social society Speech on Conciliation Stamp Act Stanlis Stanlis’s Strauss Studies in Burke taxation theory Thomas tion tradition understanding University Press virtue Warren Hastings Whigs Writings