American Thought and Writing: The Revolution and the early RepublicRussel Blaine Nye, Norman S. Grabo Houghton Mifflin, 1965 |
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Strana 257
... Moral Evil , and the Means of Its Extinction [ From Principles of Nature , 1802 ] The facts in the physical world are , many of them , difficult of solu- tion : those of the moral world have perplexed still more the operations of the ...
... Moral Evil , and the Means of Its Extinction [ From Principles of Nature , 1802 ] The facts in the physical world are , many of them , difficult of solu- tion : those of the moral world have perplexed still more the operations of the ...
Strana 258
... moral dis- crimination , have in many cases presented to human investigation a barrier to farther progress ; the intentional malignant descriptions of superstition have , in almost every age and country , terrified the mind of man , and ...
... moral dis- crimination , have in many cases presented to human investigation a barrier to farther progress ; the intentional malignant descriptions of superstition have , in almost every age and country , terrified the mind of man , and ...
Strana 260
... moral law , this would not affect the decision upon the subject in regard to man ; because that evil could not be transferred from a different kind of beings in the other world , to those who exist upon earth . As the moral properties ...
... moral law , this would not affect the decision upon the subject in regard to man ; because that evil could not be transferred from a different kind of beings in the other world , to those who exist upon earth . As the moral properties ...
Obsah
INTRODUCTION | xi |
A NOTE ON THE TEXTS | xxxix |
Jonathan Mayhew | 3 |
Autorská práva | |
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Adams Age of Reason American ANDRÉ army authority believe Britain British called cause character Charles Brockden Brown Charlotte Temple citizens civil colonies colonists common Congress constitution Convention danger Declaration defend Deism democracy duty effect election elective monarchy enemies England equal established Europe evil existence experience faction force foreign France Franklin French Revolution give governors happiness heaven hereditary honor human ideas independence interest Jefferson Joel Barlow John John Adams John Dickinson justice king language laws letter liberty mankind means ment mind monarchy moral nation nature never object opinion oppression Paine Parliament passions peace Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia Philip Freneau political present principles reason religion republic republican respect Revolution Samuel Adams sense society spirit TEXT things Thomas Jefferson Thomas Paine thou thought tion truth union United virtue whole wisdom writing wrote