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Edmund Burke: The Practical Imagination

Harvard University Press (1967)

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  1. Normative prudence as a tradition of statecraft.Alberto R. Coll - 1991 - Ethics and International Affairs 5:33–51.
    Coll clearly advocates the Aristotelian notion that "moral principles are ultimately realized only in specific acts which human beings choose to carry out." He cites Washington, Lincoln, and Churchill as examples of leaders whose moral wisdom in political reasoning led to a statecraft explicitly derived from prudence.
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  • Commonsense, science and public opinion.Martin Roiser - 1987 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 17 (4):411–432.
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  • The Image of Science as a Threat: Burke versus Priestley and the ‘Philosophic Revolution’.Maurice Crosland - 1987 - British Journal for the History of Science 20 (3):277-307.
    So much of the history of science has been written from the point of view of the scientist or the proto-scientist that it may be salutary for the modern reader occasionally to consider how science and its early practitioners were viewed from the outside. We must not be too surprised if a pioneering activity performed by controversial agents was misunderstood or misrepresented and if what emerges is, therefore, sometimes less of a portrait than a caricature. We are concerned here much (...)
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