Truth in Our Practice: Representing Justice in Milton's Poetry and ProseUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 2003 - 386 pages |
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Page 53
... serves as its source . In a later passage , Cicero asserts that human positive law cannot serve as the basis of justice , since tyrants may enact unjust laws , and so 122 On right reason , see Robert Hoopes , Right Reason in the English ...
... serves as its source . In a later passage , Cicero asserts that human positive law cannot serve as the basis of justice , since tyrants may enact unjust laws , and so 122 On right reason , see Robert Hoopes , Right Reason in the English ...
Page 282
... serve his own political machinations that pave the path to power . Placing truth and falsehood into discourse , then , serves as an act of justice or an act of injustice , respectively . Satan's deliberate and calculated misnaming of ...
... serve his own political machinations that pave the path to power . Placing truth and falsehood into discourse , then , serves as an act of justice or an act of injustice , respectively . Satan's deliberate and calculated misnaming of ...
Page 291
... serve God freely , and the actions of just men defer just punishment and prompt grace . Michael tells Adam , " Such ... serves as an intelligible medium for the communication of laws of " civil Justice " and " religious Rites " ( 12.231 ) ...
... serve God freely , and the actions of just men defer just punishment and prompt grace . Michael tells Adam , " Such ... serves as an intelligible medium for the communication of laws of " civil Justice " and " religious Rites " ( 12.231 ) ...
Contents
Constructing a Just Self in the | 72 |
Determinable Justice in The | 128 |
The English View of Ireland and the Application of Justice | 156 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
actions activity Adam advance appears argument asserts audience authority basis become Book Cambridge cause century Chapter character Charles Charles's Christian citizens Civil conception conscience constitutes construct contract correct covenant critical death defense demonstrate determined discourse discussed divine effect Eikon Basilike Eikonoklastes England English example execution experience fact faith fall function Further God's justice Golden human identifies individuals injustice inner instance intelligibility interpretation Irish John king king's knowledge linguistic literary maintains means memory Milton monument nature notes observes offers Paradise Lost perform perhaps poem poetry political position practice present Press principle provides public sphere punishment readers reading reason represents requires Restoration result rhetoric role royalist Samson Agonistes Satan Second seems sense serves suggests tradition transformation trial true truth understanding Univ universal virtue writes York