Benjamin Franklin and His GodsUniversity of Illinois Press, 1999 - Počet stran: 213 Against the religious backdrop of pre- and postcolonial America stands the towering figure--and mind--of Benjamin Franklin. A Renaissance man in a Revolutionary time, Franklin had interests and knowledge not only in religion but in literature, philosophy, politics, publishing, history, and scientific inquiry, among many other disciplines. Kerry S. Walters examines Franklin's search for the Divine using a similar, multifaceted approach--and in so doing has created the first extended treatment of Franklin's religious thought in thirty years. Walters brings the same intellectual range and depth to the understanding of Franklin's beliefs that Franklin brought to his own quest. What emerges from this pilgrimage into the soul of one of America's greatest figures is a very human Benjamin Franklin who grew with the accumulation of knowledge to arrive at a "theistic perspectivism," which provided him with a philosophical explanation for the diversity of religious faiths--and a justification for the liberty of conscience he advocated throughout his life. Benjamin Franklin and His Gods is an original and beautifully challenging spiritual and intellectual biography. Destined to be a classic. |
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Strana
... essays somehow got in the way , and several times the manu- script found itself temporarily shelved because I needed either more time to think through Franklin's writings or a vacation from them . As the seasons came and went I began to ...
... essays somehow got in the way , and several times the manu- script found itself temporarily shelved because I needed either more time to think through Franklin's writings or a vacation from them . As the seasons came and went I began to ...
Strana 4
... essay from his 1933 Studies in Classic American Literature , Lawrence brutally denounces Franklin's religious and moral thought as noth- ing more than a smug brief for bourgeois , marketplace values . Franklin , Lawrence insists ...
... essay from his 1933 Studies in Classic American Literature , Lawrence brutally denounces Franklin's religious and moral thought as noth- ing more than a smug brief for bourgeois , marketplace values . Franklin , Lawrence insists ...
Strana 5
... essay , he counters what he sees as Franklin's shopkeeper mentality with his own defiant credo , taking it as a more authentic statement of the human spirit than Benjamin's " neat back garden . " " I believe , " says Lawrence , That I ...
... essay , he counters what he sees as Franklin's shopkeeper mentality with his own defiant credo , taking it as a more authentic statement of the human spirit than Benjamin's " neat back garden . " " I believe , " says Lawrence , That I ...
Strana 6
... essay on Franklin's religious sensibility , then , unwittingly comes close to the truth . Although the Jungian imagery in Lawrence's credo is obviously foreign to the eighteenth - century Franklin , the spirit of its tenets is not . For ...
... essay on Franklin's religious sensibility , then , unwittingly comes close to the truth . Although the Jungian imagery in Lawrence's credo is obviously foreign to the eighteenth - century Franklin , the spirit of its tenets is not . For ...
Strana 17
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Obsah
Between Worlds | 17 |
A False Start | 43 |
The Great Insight | 67 |
A Comfortable Belief | 96 |
Taming Wolves | 113 |
Sugar and Paper | 130 |
Notes | 153 |
209 | |
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Addison Aldridge Alfred Owen ambivalence American argued argument atheism Autobiography Benjamin Franklin Bonifacius Boston Calvinism Calvinist Cause chap Christian church claim concludes Consequently conviction Cotton Mather credo D. H. Lawrence defended deism deists deity Denham Dissertation Dissertation's divine doctrine Dogood letters early eighteenth-century England Enlightenment Essay evil example faith fictions Fowler Frank Franklin and Nature's Franklin's religious thought George Whitefield God's gods Hemphill Hemphill's human Ibid Increase Mather insight intellectual James Jane Mecom John Jonathan Edwards Joseph Priestley Josiah Keimer later Lawrence liberal liberal Christianity logical London Madame Brillon metaphysical mind moral natural necessitarianism never Newton orthodox pain Papers Philadelphia philosophical polytheism prayer Presbyterian Puritan rational reason reflections religion religious beliefs religious perspective says sectarian sects Shaftesbury Silence Dogood special providences spirit tells theistic perspectivism theological thing tion truth University Press virtue William Wollaston worldview worship Writings wrote young Franklin youth