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The life of Henry More.: (Parts 1 and 2) - v. 167

Ward, RichardCourtney, Cecil(Edited by)Courtney, Michelle(Edited by)Crocker, R.(Edited by)Hall, Rupert(Edited by)Hutton, S.(Edited by)
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The Cambridge Platonist, Henry More (1614-1687), was a dominant figure on the seventeenth-century intellectual scene.

His life spanned both the political revolutions of the English Civil War and its aftermath and the intellectual revolution in seventeenth-century science and philosophy.

More was highly regarded in his own day as a metaphysician, although the combination of receptivity to the new (such as his admiration of Galileo, Descartes and Boyle) and defence of traditional thinking (notably his belief in witchcraft) makes him a difficult figure to assess today.

The heterodoxy of his theological views notwithstanding, More was an important spokesman for moderation within the Anglican Church after the Restoration, and a key figure in the Latitudinarian movement.

Richard Ward's Life of Henry More is the only biographical account of him by one of his contemporaries.

Ward's almost hagiographical tone is ample testimony to the high regard in which More was held by his admirers.

Ward's Life is an important document of intellectual and cultural history which testifies to the continuing impact of More's ideas in the Enlightenment.

Among other topics, Ward's biography registers the impact of Quakerism in the late seventeenth century and includes important details about More's `heroine pupil', Anne Conway.

The present edition prints both the only modern edition of the printed part of Ward's Account first published in 1710, together with the manuscript Account of More's writings which is published here for the first time.

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£44.99
Product Details
Springer
9401142238 / 9789401142236
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
192
31/01/2000
English
406 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%