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  1. Avertissement.[author unknown] - 1985 - Heidegger Studies 1:3-3.
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  • Advertisement.[author unknown] - 2007 - Symposium 11 (1):224-224.
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  • Avertissement.[author unknown] - 1949 - Dialectica 3 (4):247-247.
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  • Revolutionary Politics and Locke's Two Treatises of Government.Richard Ashcraft - 1986 - Princeton University Press.
    "This is one of the most significant contributions to Locke studies in the twentieth century.
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  • The government of the passions.James A. Harris - 2013 - In James Anthony Harris (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of British Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 270.
    The chapter begins with early eighteenth-century descriptions of the use of reason, properly supplemented by faith and grace, in the government of the passions. Next the familiar figures of Shaftesbury and Hutcheson are presented, with emphasis laid upon their insistence that government of the passions is work that the individual has to do for himself. The question is then raised whether all people can be conceived as able to do the work necessary to self-government, and Mandeville is introduced as an (...)
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  • Critique and crisis. Enlightenment and the pathogenesis of Modern Society.Reinhart Koselleck - 1989 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 179 (2):232-233.
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  • The Idea of Progress in Eighteenth-Century Britain.David SPADAFORA - 1990 - Utopian Studies 2 (1):249-250.
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  • From Greece to Babylon:The political thought of Andrew Michael Ramsay (1686–1743).Doohwan Ahn - 2011 - History of European Ideas 37 (4):421-437.
    This paper explores the political thought of Andrew Michael Ramsay with particular reference to his highly acclaimed book called A New Cyropaedia, or the Travels of Cyrus (1727). Dedicated to Prince Charles Edward Stuart, the Young Pretender, to whom he was tutor, this work has been hitherto viewed as a Jacobite imitation of the Telemachus, Son of Ulysses(1699) of his eminent teacher archbishop Fénelon of Cambrai. By tracing the dual legacy of the first Persian Emperor Cyrus in Western thought, I (...)
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  • Advertisement.[author unknown] - 1998 - Symposium 2 (1):123-123.
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  • Fénelon on Luxury, War and Trade in the Telemachus.Paul Schuurman - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (2):179-199.
    Summary In his novel The Adventures of Telemachus, François de la Mothe-Fénelon (1651–1715) presents a utopian society, Boetica, in which the role of luxury, war and trade is extremely limited. In unreformed Salentum, on the other hand, Fénelon shows the opposite image, one in which the three elements reinforce each other in a fatal feedback-loop. I analyse the relationship between luxury, war and trade in the Telemachus and I sketch the background to Fénelon's views, with special attention to the military (...)
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