My Pen and My Soul Have Ever Gone Together: Thomas Paine and the American RevolutionRoutledge, 5 mai 2008 - 196 pages It is the study of how Thomas Paine's religious beliefs shaped his political ideology and influenced his political activism. |
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... perhaps more important because of its proximity to England, a country Paine viewed as having the most despotic of all governments. Paine had long ceased to think of himself as an English man—it was the United States of America that ...
... perhaps more important because of its proximity to England, a country Paine viewed as having the most despotic of all governments. Paine had long ceased to think of himself as an English man—it was the United States of America that ...
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... Perhaps this is because his political activities consumed most of his life and overshadowed his religious works, which did not take prominence until the last decade of his life. It is also probable that, due in part Studies in American ...
... Perhaps this is because his political activities consumed most of his life and overshadowed his religious works, which did not take prominence until the last decade of his life. It is also probable that, due in part Studies in American ...
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... perhaps more than any other historian, has studied Paine in that proper context and placed him among his revolutionary peers in Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, as valuable as Foner's study is, it is not a biography of Paine; in many ways ...
... perhaps more than any other historian, has studied Paine in that proper context and placed him among his revolutionary peers in Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, as valuable as Foner's study is, it is not a biography of Paine; in many ways ...
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... perhaps the Colonel Richard Gimbel Collection at the American Philosophical Society Library in Philadelphia. However, this collection is mostly secondary sources related to Paine; the original documents related to Paine have already ...
... perhaps the Colonel Richard Gimbel Collection at the American Philosophical Society Library in Philadelphia. However, this collection is mostly secondary sources related to Paine; the original documents related to Paine have already ...
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Table des matières
1 | |
10 | |
Thomas Paine and the Making of Common Sense | 27 |
Chapter Three Why Thomas Paine? | 46 |
Chapter Four The Origins and Significance of Paines Religious Beliefs | 61 |
The Strange Mission of Thomas Paine | 83 |
Conclusion | 101 |
Common Sense | 106 |
Notes | 113 |
Bibliography | 138 |
Index | 146 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
My Pen and My Soul Have Ever Gone Together: Thomas Paine and the American ... Vikki Vickers Aucun aperçu disponible - 2008 |
"My Pen and My Soul Have Ever Gone Together": Thomas Paine and the American ... Vikki J. Vickers Aucun aperçu disponible - 2006 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
According Adams Age of Reason Aitken American argued argument assertion attempt Barclay became become beliefs Bible Britain British called cause Christian claims clearly colonies colonists Common Sense Complete Writings conclusion Congress context Continental continued created debate deism deist demonstrate England English equality essay established evidence example excise fact father Finally Foner France Franklin French Friends further George God’s historians Ibid ideas important included independence influence issue John king knowledge later laws Letter Lewes London magazine Major mankind matter mind monarchy moral natural never noted officers origins Paine’s pamphlet Parliament Pennsylvania Magazine Perhaps political possible Press principles published Quaker question readers religion religious Revolution Revolutionary rhetoric Rights Robert Rush scholars scientific separation significant simple social Society things Thomas Paine thought true University written wrote York