Edmund Burke: Selected Writings and Speeches |
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Page 6
All of these reviews of books on law reveal that early in his public life Burke had acquired an encyclopedic knowledge of civil, criminal, constitutional, and Natural Law. But his knowledge of the law is most clearly evident in his ...
All of these reviews of books on law reveal that early in his public life Burke had acquired an encyclopedic knowledge of civil, criminal, constitutional, and Natural Law. But his knowledge of the law is most clearly evident in his ...
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... to Blackstone," because Coke had inspired his seventeenth-century successors in legal theory to give a strong moral and constitutional basis to English civil liberty under the common law. Among the men who followed Coke was Selden, ...
... to Blackstone," because Coke had inspired his seventeenth-century successors in legal theory to give a strong moral and constitutional basis to English civil liberty under the common law. Among the men who followed Coke was Selden, ...
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Throughout Burke's Abridgment of English History (1757) and the early volumes of the Annual Register (1759-65), his veneration for the historical diversity and continuity of civil society, so like that of Montesquieu, is everywhere ...
Throughout Burke's Abridgment of English History (1757) and the early volumes of the Annual Register (1759-65), his veneration for the historical diversity and continuity of civil society, so like that of Montesquieu, is everywhere ...
Page 20
He stressed the importance of legal prescription and the common law, of a balanced growth and change, combining past inheritance and present needs, and of the "wisdom of our ancestors," as embodied in living social traditions and civil ...
He stressed the importance of legal prescription and the common law, of a balanced growth and change, combining past inheritance and present needs, and of the "wisdom of our ancestors," as embodied in living social traditions and civil ...
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tionary theory of man and civil society. Burke was the first public man in Europe to perceive the ideological basis of the Revolution, centered in a materialistic conception of man and a mechanistic conception of society.
tionary theory of man and civil society. Burke was the first public man in Europe to perceive the ideological basis of the Revolution, centered in a materialistic conception of man and a mechanistic conception of society.
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Contents
1 | |
19 | |
47 | |
An Abridgment of English History 1757 | 76 |
Selections from Book Reviews in the Annual Register | 104 |
A Short Account of a Late Short Administration 1766 | 117 |
Speech on Conciliation 1775 | 176 |
Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol 1777 | 223 |
Tract on the Popery Laws 1765 | 253 |
A Letter to a Peer of Ireland 1782 | 274 |
A Letter to Sir Hercules Langrishe 1792 | 288 |
A Letter to Richard Burke 1793 | 320 |
A Letter to William Smith 1795 | 330 |
Speech on Economical Reform 1780 | 341 |
Speech on the Middlesex Election 1771 | 363 |
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abuse affairs appear attempt authority become believe better body Britain British Burke Burke's called Catholics cause character Church circumstances civil colonies Company concerning conduct consider consideration Constitution continued corruption course court crown duty effect election England English equal established evil existence favor force France French give ground hands honor House of Commons human ideas importance India institutions interest Ireland justice king kingdom least less liberty look Lord mankind manner matter means measure ment mind moral nature necessary never object opinion original Parliament party persons political possession practice present principles produce Protestant question reason reform regard religion rule sense society sort spirit sure things thought tion true virtue whilst whole wish