Search results for 'Pamphleteers' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Maurice William Cranston (1986). Philosophers and Pamphleteers: Political Theorists of the Enlightenment. Oxford University Press.score: 18.0
    This volume discusses the ideas of six leading thinkers of the French Enlightenment: Montesquieu, Voltaire, Rousseau, Diderot, Holbach, and Condorcet. A general introduction surveys the political theories of the Enlightenment, setting them in the context of the political realities of 18th-century France. The first book of its kind on the subject, Philosophers and Pamphleteers brings a welcome, new perspective to the study of French political thought during a fascinating historical era.
     
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  2. J. King (1966). Papist Pamphleteers. Augustinianum 6 (2):359-359.score: 9.0
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  3. Olivier Ferret (2007). La Fureur de Nuire: Échanges Pamphlétaires Entre Philosophes Et Antiphilosophes, 1750-1770. Voltaire Foundation.score: 6.0
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  4. Clayton Neighbors, Eric R. Pedersen, Debra Kaysen, Magdalena Kulesza & Theresa Walter (2011). What Should We Do When Participants Report Dangerous Drinking? The Impact of Personalized Letters Versus General Pamphlets as a Function of Sex and Controlled Orientation. Ethics and Behavior 22 (1):1 - 15.score: 4.0
    Research in which participants report potentially dangerous health-related behaviors raises ethical and professional questions about what to do with that information. Policies and laws regarding reportable behaviors vary across states and Institutional Review Boards (IRB). In alcohol research, IRBs often require researchers to respond to participants who report dangerous drinking practices. Researchers have little guidance regarding how best to respond in such cases. Personalized feedback or general nonpersonalized information may prove differentially effective as a function of gender and/or level of (...)
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  5. Ingeborg Berlin Vogelstein (1997). Reformation Pamphlets. Philosophy and Theology 10 (2):501-524.score: 4.0
    By way of introduction, this paper points out inherent problems in attempting a comprehensive social history of the Reformation, due to the complex dynamics at work in sixteenth century European society.Contemporary pamphlet literature, a resource as yet not intensively explored, reflects in a unique manner the rich variety of the Reformation experience in all walks of life, from both sides of the schism. By examining a representative sampling of such tracts, the essay strives to establish some immediacy to that experience. (...)
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  6. Joseph B. Atkins (ed.) (2002). The Mission: Journalism, Ethics and the World. Iowa State University Press.score: 3.0
    Machine generated contents note: Contributors ix -- Foreword by Douglas A. Boyd andJoseph D. Straubhaar xiii -- Preface byMariaHenson xv -- Acknowledgments xvii -- Part I. Introduction 1 -- Chapter 1. Journalism as a Mission: Ethics and Purpose -- from an International Perspective -- by Joseph B. Atkins 3 -- Chapter 2. Chaos and Order: Sacrificing the Individual for the -- Sake of Social Harmony -- by John C. Merrill 17 -- Part II. In the United States and Latin America (...)
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  7. Duncan Forbes (1975). Hume's Philosophical Politics. Cambridge University Press.score: 3.0
    This is a study of Hume's political thought based on a survey of all his writings in their original and revised versions, with very full reference to the works of predecessors and contemporaries, including journalists, pamphleteers and historians. Hume's political thinking is presented in its historical context as a modem, 'philosophical', empirically based system of politics for a new post-revolutionary age, and a political education for parochial, backward-looking party men.
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  8. Irving H. Anellis (2011). The Logic Pamphlets of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson and Related Pieces (Review). Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (4):506-507.score: 3.0
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  9. R. Seager (1996). D. Shotter: The Fall of the Roman Republic. (Lancaster Pamphlets.) London: Routledge, 1994. The Classical Review 46 (1):185-185.score: 3.0
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  10. R. W. Burgess (1999). H. A. P OHLSANDER : The Emperor Constantine (Lancaster Pamphlets). Pp. Xiv + 105, 10 Figs. London and New York: Routledge, 1996. Paper, £6.99. ISBN: 0-415-13178-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 49 (01):286-.score: 3.0
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  11. Catharine Edwards (1993). David Shotter: Augustus Caesar. (Lancaster Pamphlets.) Pp. Vi + 98; 4 Maps and 1 Family Tree. London and New York: Routledge, 1991. Paper, £4.99. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (01):198-199.score: 3.0
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  12. William Godwin, Four Early Pamphlets.score: 3.0
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  13. Patrick Kelly (1985). A Pamphlet Attributed to John Toland and an Unpublished Reply by Archbishop William King. Topoi 4 (1):81-90.score: 3.0
  14. J. R. A. (1979). Richard Price and the Ethical Foundations of the American Revolution; Selections From His Pamphlets, with Appendices. The Review of Metaphysics 33 (1):195-196.score: 3.0
  15. Miriam Griffin (1998). D. Shotter: Nero (Lancaster Pamphlets). Pp. Xvii + 101, 6 Figs. London and New York: Routledge, 1996. Paper, £6.99. ISBN: 0-415-1203-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 48 (01):224-225.score: 3.0
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  16. J. N. L. Myres (1937). Norman H. Baynes: The Political Ideas o St. Augustine's De Civitate Dei. Pp. 18. (Historical Association Pamphlet No. 104.) London: Bell, 1936. Paper, 1s. Id. (To Non-Members). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 51 (01):40-41.score: 3.0
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  17. Martin Schloemann (1979). The Lutheran Pamphlets Against Thomas Müntzer. Philosophy and History 12 (2):196-197.score: 3.0
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  18. Jonathan Wright (2011). Women and the Pamphlet Culture of Revolutionary England, 1640–1660. By Marcus Nevitt. Heythrop Journal 52 (5):869-870.score: 3.0
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  19. R. G. Austin (1938). Horace and the Comic Spirit E. K. Rand: Horace and the Spirit of Comedy. (The Rice Institute Pamphlet, Vol. XXIV, No. 2.) Pp. 79. Houston, Texas: Rice Institute, 1937. Paper. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 52 (01):21-22.score: 3.0
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  20. M. A. Box, David Harvey & Michael Silverthorne (2003). A Diplomatic Transcription of Hume's “Volunteer Pamphlet” for Archibald Stewart: Political Whigs, Religious Whigs, and Jacobites. Hume Studies 29 (2):223-266.score: 3.0
  21. Joseph F. Cantillon (1947). The Index to American Catholic Pamphlets. Thought 22 (2):360-361.score: 3.0
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  22. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (2010). The Logic Pamphlets of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson and Related Pieces. University Press of Virginia.score: 3.0
  23. Arthur Conan Doyle (2009). Spiritualist Pamphlets. Cambridge Scholars Pub..score: 3.0
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  24. A. T. Fear (1994). D. Shotter: Tiberius Caesar. Pp. Ix+97; 5 Figs. London and New York: Routledge, 1992. Paper, £4.99 (Lancaster Pamphlets.). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 44 (01):225-226.score: 3.0
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  25. E. Harrison (1924). A Classified Catalogue of the Books, Pamphlets, and Maps in the Library of the Societies for the Promotion of Hellenic and Roman Studies. 4to. Pp. Xvi + 336. London: Macmillan, 1924. Boards, 15s. 6d. Net (to Members of Either Society, 7s. 6d.). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 38 (7-8):213-.score: 3.0
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  26. Stanley Ireland (1999). D. Shotter: Roman Britain (Lancaster Pamphlets). Pp. Xiv + 98, 5maps. London and New York: Routledge, 1998. Paper, £6.99. ISBN: 0-415-16579-. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 49 (02):608-.score: 3.0
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  27. S. J. V. Malloch (2006). Wilkinson (S.) Caligula . (Lancaster Pamphlets in Ancient History.) Pp. Viii + 110, Maps, Fig. London and New York: Routledge, 2005. Paper, £9.99. ISBN: 0-415-34121-3 (0-415-35768-3 Hbk). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 56 (01):249-.score: 3.0
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  28. Thomas Paine (2010). Writings of Thomas Paine: A Collection of Pamphlets From America's Most Radical Founding Father. Red and Black Publishers.score: 3.0
    Common sense -- African slavery in America -- An occasional letter on the female sex -- Agrarian justice -- The rights of man -- The age of reason.
     
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  29. Michael Silverthorne (2003). A Diplomatic Transcription of Hume's “Volunteer Pamphlet” for Archibald Stewart. Hume Studies 29 (2):223-266.score: 3.0
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  30. Austin Smyth (1923). Two Problems in Aeschylus The Problem of the Agamemnon. By E. S. Hoernle, I.C.S. A Pamphlet. 8vo. Pp. Iii + 42. Oxford : Basil Blackwell, 1921. 2s. Net. The Recognition Scene in the Choephoroe. By E. S. Hoernle, I.C.S. A Pamphlet. 8vo. Pp. Iii + 28. Oxford : Basil Blackwell, 1922. 2s. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 37 (7-8):187-.score: 3.0
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  31. J. E. Tobin (1943). The Index to American Catholic Pamphlets. Thought 18 (4):731-731.score: 3.0
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  32. James Conant, I Wittgenstein.score: 1.0
    The document before you is by a member of a fanatical sect of heretical Ludwig scholars. Through a twist of fate it has fallen into my hands. I hesitate to make it public, since its circulation may do more harm than good. What speaks against publication is that it has the power to corrupt young minds. I do not take a light view of the dangers it poses in this regard. What speaks in favor of publication is the fact that (...)
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  33. Judith Grant (1993). Fundamental Feminism: Contesting the Core Concepts of Feminist Theory. Routledge.score: 1.0
    What makes feminist theory feminist? How did so many different feminisms come to exist? In Fundamental Feminism, Judith Grant addresses these questions by offering a critical exploration of the evolution of feminist theory and the state of feminist thinking today. Grant provides a lively assessment of the major problems of contemporary feminist thought and identifies a set of common assumptions that link the wide variety of feminist theories in existence. Fundamental Feminism calls for nothing less than a substantial revision of (...)
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  34. Louis P. Pojman, Moral Saints and Moral Heroes.score: 1.0
    In 1941 Father Maximilian Kolbe, a Polish friar from Warsaw was arrested for publishing anti-Nazi pamphlets and sentenced to Auschwitz. There he was beaten, kicked by shiny leather boots, and whipped by his prison guards. After one prisoner successfully escaped, the prescribed punishment was to select ten other prisoners who were to die by starvation. As ten prisoners were pulled out of line one by one, Fr. Kolbe broke out from the ranks, pleading with he Commandant to be allowed to (...)
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  35. Anthony Grafton (1999). Cardano's Cosmos: The Worlds and Works of a Renaissance Astrologer. Harvard University Press.score: 1.0
    This book traces Cardano's contentious career from his first astrological pamphlet through his rise to high-level consulting and his remarkable autobiographical ...
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  36. Bertrand Russell (1987). Bertrand Russell on Ethics, Sex, and Marriage. Prometheus Books.score: 1.0
    During his long life (1872-1970) Bertrand Russell was one of a handful of social thinkers, let alone internationally recognized philosophers, whose views on contemporary issues won for him a devoted and supportive audience on the one hand and a host of vituperative critics on the other. Russell's revolutionary writings frequently placed him in the center of controversy with conservatives and all those who were unwilling to consider moral questions from a rational rather than an emotional stance. -/- Al Seckel has (...)
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  37. Lesley Higgins (2002). The Modernist Cult of Ugliness: Aesthetic and Gender Politics. Palgrave.score: 1.0
    "Cult of ugliness," Ezra Pound’s phrase, powerfully summarizes the ways in which modernists such as Pound, T. S. Eliot, Wyndham Lewis, and T. E. Hulme—the self-styled "Men of 1914"—responded to the "horrid or sordid or disgusting" conditions of modernity by radically changing aesthetic theory and literary practice. Only the representation of "ugliness," they protested, would produce the new, truly "beautiful" work of art. They dissociated the beautiful from its traditional embodiment in female beauty, and from its association with Walter Pater (...)
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  38. Robert Nadeau, Reassessing Hayek as Popularizer.score: 1.0
    The Road to Serfdom (Hayek 1944)2 is without a doubt the book that made Friedrich Hayek world famous. But one must immediately add that Hayek the trained economist was far from being satisfied with this situation, at least at the beginning. “I have long resented”, writes Hayek, “being more widely known by what I regarded as a pamphlet for the time than by my strictly scientific work.” But he adds immediately: “After reexamining what I wrote then in the light of (...)
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  39. James Fieser (ed.) (2001). Early Responses to Hume's Writings on Religion. Thoemmes Press.score: 1.0
    In the past 250 years, David Hume probably had a greater impact on the field of philosophy of religion than any other single philosopher. He relentlessly attacked the standard proofs for God's existence, traditional notions of God's nature and divine governance, the connection between morality and religion, and the rationality of belief in miracles. He also advanced radical theories of the origin of religious ideas, grounding such notions in human psychology rather than in divine reality. In the last decade of (...)
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  40. Gopal Balakrishnan (2000). The Enemy: An Intellectual Portrait of Carl Schmitt. Verso.score: 1.0
    A comprehensive analysis of all of Schmitt's major works--his books, articles & pamphlets from 1919 to 1950--presented in an arresting narrative form.
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  41. Gay Wilson Allen (1970). William James. Minneapolis,University of Minnesota Press.score: 1.0
    University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers ; No. 88.
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  42. James Fieser & James Oswald (eds.) (2000). Scottish Common Sense Philosophy: Sources and Origins. Thoemmes Press.score: 1.0
    The Scottish Common Sense School of philosophy emerged during the Scottish Enlightenment of the second half of the eighteenth century. The School’s principal proponents were Thomas Reid, James Oswald, James Beattie and Dugald Stewart. They believed that we are all naturally implanted with an array of common sense intuitions and these intuitions are in fact the foundation of truth. Their approach dominated philosophical thought in Great Britain and the United States until the mid nineteenth century. In recent years philosophers have (...)
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  43. Bertrand Russell (1995). Pacifism and Revolution, 1916-18. Routledge.score: 1.0
    From 1895, the year he published his first signed article, to four days before his death when he wrote his last, Bertrand Russel was a powerful figure in the world of mathematics, philosophy, human rights and the struggle for peace. During his liftime he published 70 books, almost as many pamphlets and over 2,000 articles. The No-Conscription Fellowship: Pacifism and Revolution, 1916-18 is the fouteenth volume in an extensive collection of the writings of Bertrand Russel. This book begins when (...)
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  44. Justin Leiber (2011). Descartes: The Smear and Related Misconstruals. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 41 (4):365-376.score: 1.0
    In part because he is known through his Meditations, a short pamphlet he wrote, rightly in fear, to conciliate (unsuccessfully) with the church, and because his rationalism is misconstrued when interpreted empirically, Descartes is subject to a variety of misunderstandings. It does not help that he is dogged by a canard invented in the late 1600s and revived by the animal rights movement, a canard that was designed to denigrate the then burgeoning mechanistic new science, discovered cruelly cutting up living (...)
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  45. Don Howard, Physics as Theodicy.score: 1.0
    On Saturday, August 26, 1893, thirteen-year-old Edith Low Babson was swimming in her favorite swimming hole on the Annisquam river in her home town of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Though she was a strong swimmer, something went wrong, and she drowned. A tragedy like all such. But this drowning had unusual consequences. Edith’s older brother was Roger W. Babson, who grew up to become one of America’s most prominent businessmen of the early twentieth century. A statistician, prolific author, philanthropist, founder of Babson (...)
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  46. Louis Pojman, The Admiral James B. Stockdale Lecture in Ethics and Leadership.score: 1.0
    In 1941 Father Maximilian Kolbe, a Polish friar from Warsaw was arrested for publishing anti-Nazi pamphlets and sentenced to Auschwitz. There he was beaten, kicked by shiny leather boots, and whipped by his prison guards. After one prisoner successfully escaped, the prescribed punishment was to select ten other prisoners who were to die by starvation. As ten prisoners were pulled out of line one by one, Fr. Kolbe broke out from the ranks, pleading with he Commandant to be allowed to (...)
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  47. Mark Blasius & Shane Phelan (eds.) (1997). We Are Everywhere: A Historical Sourcebook of Gay and Lesbian Politics. Routledge.score: 1.0
    An important and original new contribution to lesbian and gay studies, We Are Everywhere brings together the key primary sources relating to the politics of homosexuality. Presenting political, historical, legal, literary, and psychological documents which trace the evolution of the lesbian and gay movement, it includes documents as diverse as organization pamphlets, essays, polemics, speeches, newspaper and journal articles, and academic papers. We Are Everywhere includes writings from the beginnings of the gay and lesbian movement in the 19th century by (...)
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  48. Daniela Bianchi (1985). Some Sources for a History of English Socinianism a Bibliography of 17th Century English Socinian Writings. Topoi 4 (1):91-120.score: 1.0
    In 1697, the Presbyterian, William Bates, presented an address, on behalf of some dissenting ministers, to William of Orange. In this, he called for measures against the Socinians and Deists, and, in particular, for the banning of the publication of Socinian works. Bates' address was published in JOHN HOWE, Sermon Preech'd on the Day of Thanksgiving (1698). On 17th February, 1698, the House of Commons presented an address to the King, We do further, in all humility, beseech Your Majesty, that (...)
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  49. Eric Foner (2005). Tom Paine and Revolutionary America. Oxford University Press.score: 1.0
    Since its publication in 1976, Tom Paine and Revolutionary America has been recognized as a classic study of the career of the foremost political pamphleteer of the Age of Revolution, and a model of how to integrate the political, intellectual, and social history of the struggle for American independence. Foner skillfully brings together an account of Paine's remarkable career with a careful examination of the social worlds within which he operated, in Great Britain, France, and especially the United States. He (...)
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  50. Douglas Kellner, Intellectuals and New Technologies.score: 1.0
    Critical intellectuals were traditionally those who utilized their skills of speaking and writing to denounce injustices and abuses of power, and to fight for truth, justice, progress, and other positive values. In the words of Jean-Paul Sartre (1974: 285), "the duty of the intellectual is to denounce injustice wherever it occurs." The modern critical intellectual's field of action was what Habermas (1989) called the public sphere of democratic debate, political dialogue, and the writing and discussion of newspapers, journals, pamphlets, and (...)
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  51. Noel Malcolm (2007). Reason of State, Propaganda, and the Thirty Years' War: An Unknown Translation by Thomas Hobbes. Clarendon Press.score: 1.0
    Acclaimed writer and historian Noel Malcolm presents his sensational discovery of a new work by Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679): a propaganda pamphlet on behalf of the Habsburg side in the Thirty Years' War, translated by Hobbes from a Latin original. Malcolm's book explores a fascinating episode in seventeenth-century history, illuminating both the practice of early modern propaganda and the theory of "reason of state".
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  52. Thomas Paine (1995). Collected Writings. Library of America.score: 1.0
    Common sense -- The crisis, and other pamphlets, articles, and letters -- Rights of man -- The age of reason.
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  53. Alain le Boulluec (forthcoming). Le culte des images dans le débat du Contre Celse d'Origène. Chôra:21-36.score: 1.0
    Origène réplique point par point aux arguments que Celse avait invoqués pour rejeter la caricature du culte des images composée par la polémique chrétienne. Il taxe les philosophes d’inconséquence. Au-delà du pamphlet de Celse, il pourfend une thèse que l’adversaire n’exploitait pas, mais qui était fortrépandue: le culte des statues et des images des dieux aurait une valeur symbolique. Ce symbolisme est attesté chez Plutarque, Dion Chrysostome, Maxime de Tyr, plus tard chez Porphyre. Sa diversité a pour origine la complexité (...)
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  54. Errol Black (1988). By Gossip and Myths: The Winnipeg Takeover of McKenzie Seeds. Journal of Business Ethics 7 (10):783 - 787.score: 1.0
    McKenzie Seeds is a crown corporation owned by the people of Manitoba. In 1983, the company was rocked by a scandal involving its senior management. During the course of the controversy, George F. MacDowell resigned as chairman of the McKenzie Seeds board of directors. He subsequently wrote a pamphlet which attempted to provide a context for understanding events at McKenzie Seeds. This paper provides a brief history of the company and a discussion of MacDowell's pamphlet. A postscript provides information on (...)
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  55. Mark Curran (2012). Atheism, Religion and Enlightenment in Pre-Revolutionary Europe. Boydell Press.score: 1.0
    Prologue -- Introduction -- The virtuous atheist -- The oral and written public sphere -- Books and pamphlets -- Periodicals -- The philosophe response -- Institutional reactions in France -- The Christian Enlightenment? -- Beyond the Christian Enlightenment -- Appendices. D'Holbach's publications, 1752-1789 -- Responses in French to d'Holbach's publications, 1752-1789 -- The corpus of periodical press articles produced in reaction to d'Holbach's publications.
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  56. Richard Price (1991). Political Writings. Cambridge University Press.score: 1.0
    Richard Price (1723-1791) was an eminent Welsh philosopher and Dissenting Minister. His political pamphlets won him considerable fame in the eighteenth century as a supporter of the American rebels in their struggle for independence, and for the enthusiasm with which he greeted the opening events of the French Revolution. It was this enthusiasm that provoked Edmund Burke into writing "Reflections on the Revolution of France." Price is noteworthy as a defender of freedom of thought (especially on religious matters), as a (...)
     
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  57. Wayne I. Boucher (1999). Spinoza: Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Discussions, 6 Vols. Thoemmes Press.score: 1.0
    "monumental work" - The North American Spinoza Society Newsletter , February 1999 "The sheer volume of this anthology makes it an indispensable asset to any serious scholar of Spinozism. Certainly no academic library can do without it. The quality of the material gathered here is extremely impressive. To the professional scholar of early modern philosophy many of the criticisms it contains may well look superficial and outworn, but even the best-informed experts will find much in it that will surprise and (...)
     
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  58. Antoine Côté (2006). On the Very Idea of a Democratic Empire. The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 2:31-35.score: 1.0
    The short anonymous work known as the Constitution of the Athenians has long since fascinated scholars. Written sometime in the 5th century, during or just before the Peloponnesian War, it offers a scathing attack on Athenian democratic institutions. Its author is unknown but has traditionally been called the "Old Oligarch" in reference to his obvious political convictions. But the pamphlet's interest lies not so much in its critique of Athenian democracy as in the connection the author sees between these institutions (...)
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  59. Wendy Gunther-Canada (2006). Catharine Macaulay on the Paradox of Paternal Authority in Hobbesian Politics. Hypatia 21 (2):150-173.score: 1.0
    : Catharine Macaulay's first political pamphlet, "Loose remarks on certain positions to be found in Mr. Hobbes's philosophical rudiments of government and society with a short sketch for a democratical form of government in a letter to Signor Paoli," published in London in 1769, has received no significant scholarly attention in over two hundred years. It is of primary interest because of the light it sheds on Macaulay's critique of patriarchal politics, which helps to establish a new line of thinking (...)
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  60. J. R. Milton & Philip Milton (eds.) (2010). John Locke: An Essay Concerning Toleration: And Other Writings on Law and Politics, 1667-1683. OUP Oxford.score: 1.0
    J. R. and Philip Milton present the first critical edition of John Locke's Essay concerning Toleration and a number of other writings on law and politics composed between 1667 and 1683. Although Locke never published any of these works himself they are of very great interest for students of his intellectual development because they are markedly different from the early works he wrote while at Oxford and show him working out ideas that were to appear in his mature political writings, (...)
     
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  61. Patricia Springborg (2005). Mary Astell: Theorist of Freedom From Domination. Cambridge University Press.score: 1.0
    Philosopher, theologian, educational theorist, feminist and political pamphleteer, Mary Astell was an important figure in the history of ideas of the early modern period. Among the first systematic critics of John Locke's entire corpus, she is best known for the famous question which prefaces her Reflections on Marriage: 'If all men are born free, how is it that all women are born slaves?' She is claimed by modern Republican theorists and feminists alike but, as a Royalist High Church Tory, the (...)
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