Liberty: God's Gift to HumanityLexington Books, 2006 - 285 páginas Liberty: God's Gift to Humanity is a defense of liberalism, the political philosophy which holds that governments should be established for the protection of individual liberty. By means of revisiting the thinking of the men who created liberal theory over the past three centuries, author Chana Cox has demonstrated that historically the bond between liberalism and religion has been strong and that liberals have embraced virtue, encouraged social control, and increased the common good. |
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Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
The Birth of a Principle All Gods People Are Become Prophets | 11 |
On Hobbes and the New Science of Government | 35 |
John Locke Absolute Liberty Just and True Liberty Equal and Impartial Liberty | 59 |
Hobbes Locke and the Critics | 87 |
Eighteenth Century Men and Not Angels | 115 |
Adam Smith and the New Science of Freedom Smiths Methodology | 135 |
Individual Liberty Meets Free Market Capitalism | 157 |
The Nineteenth Century Individualism Unbound | 181 |
The Twentieth Century | 209 |
And Beyond | 229 |
Notes | 237 |
275 | |
283 | |
About the Author | |
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Términos y frases comunes
according actions Adam Smith American argued Aristotle Aztecs believe C. B. Macpherson capitalism Charles choice Christian church civil claims classical liberals conscience Constitution cultural defend democracy deterministic economic eighteenth century Emerson England English Civil War Enlightenment equal ethical Europe example fact famine force freedom fundamental happiness Hobbes Hobbes's human increase individual liberty Isaiah Berlin Jefferson John Locke John Stuart Mill justice kibbutz king labor laws of nature Leviathan liberal society lives Locke's Lockean Madison Marx Marxist means ment Mill modern moral natural law nineteenth century Parliament peace philosopher Plato political theory possible predict principle protect Puritans religion religious revolution Rousseau rule of law Sartre scientist Scottish Enlightenment Second Treatise sectarians seems sense seventeenth simply social sort sovereign strategies Stuart thinkers thinking tion Todorov toleration twentieth century University vidual virtue Wealth of Nations women