From Enlightenment to Romanticism: Anthology, Part 1This is the first of two anthologies designed to accompany the Open University course From Enlightenment to Romanticism, an interdisciplinary exploration of the changes and transitions in European culture between 1780 and 1830. sources on the death of the Old Regime, the Napoleonic phenomenon, slavery, religion and reform. Each selection is accompanied by a detailed introduction explaining the context and siginficance of the sources.Extracts in the anthology stimulate questions rather than provide reassuring answers and offer insights into the major events, movements and personaities of the time. |
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Page 20
By what rule are punishments and rewards distributed ? What is the divine
standard of merit and demerit ? Shall we suppose that human sentiments have
place in the Deity ? How bold that hypothesis . We have no conception of any
other ...
By what rule are punishments and rewards distributed ? What is the divine
standard of merit and demerit ? Shall we suppose that human sentiments have
place in the Deity ? How bold that hypothesis . We have no conception of any
other ...
Page 21
... dog , and a serpent , and thrown into the river . Death alone was the
punishment of those who denied their ... Ought these interests , so short , so
frivolous , to be guarded by punishments eternal and infinite ? The damnation of
one man is an ...
... dog , and a serpent , and thrown into the river . Death alone was the
punishment of those who denied their ... Ought these interests , so short , so
frivolous , to be guarded by punishments eternal and infinite ? The damnation of
one man is an ...
Page 68
turned to piercing the mystery of the fate which awaits us . What concept have
you found to be more convincing than that of a multitude of punishments for the
man who has lived badly and an eternity of rewards for the man who has lived
well ?
turned to piercing the mystery of the fate which awaits us . What concept have
you found to be more convincing than that of a multitude of punishments for the
man who has lived badly and an eternity of rewards for the man who has lived
well ?
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Contents
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Don Giovanni | 3 |
Faith and death in the late Enlightenment | 17 |
David Hume Of Suicide | 24 |
Copyright | |
47 other sections not shown
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From Enlightenment to Romanticism: Anthology I Ian L. Donnachie,Ian Donnachie,Carmen Lavin Limited preview - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
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