Reflections on the Revolution in FrancePenguin UK, 1982 M09 30 - 416 páginas Burke's seminal work was written during the early months of the French Revolution, and it predicted with uncanny accuracy many of its worst excesses, including the Reign of Terror. A scathing attack on the revolution's attitudes to existing institutions, property and religion, it makes a cogent case for upholding inherited rights and established customs, argues for piecemeal reform rather than revolutionary change - and deplores the influence Burke feared the revolution might have in Britain. Reflections on the Revolution in France is now widely regarded as a classic statement of conservative political thought, and is one of the eighteenth century's great works of political rhetoric. |
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... political career became dedicated to the problem of India and he took part in the investigation of the East India Company affair. The French Revolution, too, prompted one of his best-known works, Reflections on the Revolution in France ...
... political career became dedicated to the problem of India and he took part in the investigation of the East India Company affair. The French Revolution, too, prompted one of his best-known works, Reflections on the Revolution in France ...
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... politics in a world that hoped the Revolution could be ignored, or treated as a purely local and exceptional event, isolated in space or time. Like him they looked through the political surface of the Revolution towards its economic and ...
... politics in a world that hoped the Revolution could be ignored, or treated as a purely local and exceptional event, isolated in space or time. Like him they looked through the political surface of the Revolution towards its economic and ...
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... Political Question from the Men who are concerned in it.... The power of bad men is no indifferent thing...' The letter concludes with praise of prudence and moderation: Prudence (in all things a Virtue, in Politicks the first of ...
... Political Question from the Men who are concerned in it.... The power of bad men is no indifferent thing...' The letter concludes with praise of prudence and moderation: Prudence (in all things a Virtue, in Politicks the first of ...
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... political extinction of a great civilized Nation situated in the heart of this our Western system.* It was not very long before Burke, and after him many others, were struck by 'inconveniences' of a quite different character. Up to the ...
... political extinction of a great civilized Nation situated in the heart of this our Western system.* It was not very long before Burke, and after him many others, were struck by 'inconveniences' of a quite different character. Up to the ...
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... political foresight, an attack on the French Revolution cannot have looked, in the first half of 1790, like a promising pathway to a pension. In 1790 the French Revolution did not seem dangerous, to most Englishmen. France seemed even ...
... political foresight, an attack on the French Revolution cannot have looked, in the first half of 1790, like a promising pathway to a pension. In 1790 the French Revolution did not seem dangerous, to most Englishmen. France seemed even ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Reflections on the Revolution in France: And on the Proceedings in Certain ... Edmund Burke Vista previa limitada - 2013 |
Reflections on the Revolution in France: And on the Proceedings in Certain ... Edmund Burke Vista de fragmentos - 1969 |
Términos y frases comunes
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