The collected works of Edmund Law
著者
書誌事項
The collected works of Edmund Law
Thoemmes Press, 1997
- : set
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Edmund Law's achievement was to establish Locke as the philosopher of English Protestantism. His polemical writings against the rationalist views of Samuel Clarke, Locke's chief rival, were a lucid defence of divine providence and justification of revelation on the grounds of historical reason. As a divine, he envisioned a unified church of broad comprehension, founded on the spirit of tolerance. During his lifetime his works were much in demand and reprinted many times, but the rise of Romanticism in religion and the longing for more tangible forms of authority rendered his views unfashionable and they were for a time forgotten. This collected edition of Law's works provides a source for the history of English thought in the 18th century, especially for an understanding of the reception and interpretation of Locke. They also cast light on the Deist contoversy, the Trinitarian controversy, and the controversy over subscription to the Thirty-Nine Articles.
目次
- "An Essay on the Origin of Evil" (1758), William King, trans. Edmund Law
- "An Enquiry into the Ideas of Space, Time, Immensity, and Eternity" (1734)
- "Considerations on the Theory of Religion" (1820)
- "Litigiousness Repugnant to the Laws of Christianity" (1743)
- "A Discourse on the Life and Character of Christ" (1749)
- "The True Nature and Intent of Religion" (1768)
- "A Defence of Mr Locke's Opinion Concerning Personal Identity" (1769)
- "Observations Occasioned by the Contest About Literary Property" (1770)
- "An Analysis of Mr Locke's Doctrine of Ideas in his Essays on Human Understanding" (1777)
- "A Dissertation on the Nature and Necessity of Catechising" (1783).
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