Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France is one of the major texts in the western intellectual tradition. This book describes Burke’s political and intellectual world, stressing the importance of the idea of ‘property’ in Burke’s thought. it then focuses more closely on Burke’s personal and political situation in the late 1780s to explain how the Reflections came to be written. The central part of the study discusses the meaning and interpretation of the work. in the last part of the book the author surveys the pamphlet controversy which the Reflections generated, paying particular attention to the most famous of the replies, Tom Paine’s Rights of Man. it also examines the subsequent reputation of the Reflections from the 1790...
Edmund Burke in recent years has assumed extraordinary stature in American political thinking as the...
Edmund Burke, author of Reflections on the Revolution in France, is known to a wide public as a clas...
By 1789, when the French people were just becoming absorbed in revolutionary activity, both the Unit...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the University of Wiscon...
In this paper, I examine three critical aspects of Burke\u27s beliefs, principles, and political jud...
Except that a 'Burke problem' in several guises has haunted the revival of Burke studies in recent ...
In this second of two volumes, Carl B. Cone demonstrates once again that only through a study of Edm...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
Following the commencement of the French Revolution in 1789, a debate erupted in the Atlantic world ...
This study develops a detailed reading of the interrelations between aesthetics, ideology, language,...
Amidst the upheaval of the French Revolution, the British parliamentarian and political theorist Edm...
This dissertation examines the late Eighteenth Century debate in England and France over the foundat...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
This essay explores the seemingly disjointed relationship between politics and aesthetics in Burke’s...
Edmund Burke’s Reflexions on the Revolution in France provoked one of the most fertile political deb...
Edmund Burke in recent years has assumed extraordinary stature in American political thinking as the...
Edmund Burke, author of Reflections on the Revolution in France, is known to a wide public as a clas...
By 1789, when the French people were just becoming absorbed in revolutionary activity, both the Unit...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the University of Wiscon...
In this paper, I examine three critical aspects of Burke\u27s beliefs, principles, and political jud...
Except that a 'Burke problem' in several guises has haunted the revival of Burke studies in recent ...
In this second of two volumes, Carl B. Cone demonstrates once again that only through a study of Edm...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
Following the commencement of the French Revolution in 1789, a debate erupted in the Atlantic world ...
This study develops a detailed reading of the interrelations between aesthetics, ideology, language,...
Amidst the upheaval of the French Revolution, the British parliamentarian and political theorist Edm...
This dissertation examines the late Eighteenth Century debate in England and France over the foundat...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
This essay explores the seemingly disjointed relationship between politics and aesthetics in Burke’s...
Edmund Burke’s Reflexions on the Revolution in France provoked one of the most fertile political deb...
Edmund Burke in recent years has assumed extraordinary stature in American political thinking as the...
Edmund Burke, author of Reflections on the Revolution in France, is known to a wide public as a clas...
By 1789, when the French people were just becoming absorbed in revolutionary activity, both the Unit...