From Personal Duties Towards Personal Rights: Late Medieval and Early Modern Political Thought, 1300-1600

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McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1994 - 445 páginas
Part One examines the late medieval northern Italian city-state republics and the humanist depiction of their form of polity. Part Two reviews the legal (principally canonical) and political thought behind the development of a theory of popular consent and limited authority employed to resolve the Great Schism in the Western church. Part Three describes sixteenth-century Spanish neoscholastic political writings and their application to Reformation Europe and Spanish colonial expansion in the New World. Part Four examines the political thought of some of those who responded to new problems in church/state relations caused by the fracturing of medieval Christendom in the West: Luther, Calvin, and other Reformation writers; the Protestant resistance pamphleteers; and Richard Hooker. Featuring an extensive bibliography, From Personal Duties towards Personal Rights will be of specific interest to intellectual historians as well as historians of political ideas and political theories and students in history, political science, and religious studies.
 

Contenido

CIVIC REPUBLICANISM AND RENAISSANCE LIBERTY
13
Conciliarism after Basle
107
CONSENT AND LIMIT IN SPANISH
128
EMERGING RIGHTS AS A BASIS FOR RESISTING
185
Martin Luther
195
CONCLUSION
294
BIBLIOGRAPHY
301
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Arthur P. Monahan (1930-2006) was professor emeritus, philosophy, Saint Mary's University, and the author of From Personal Duties Towards Personal Rights: Late Medieval and Early Modern Political Thought, 1300-1600 and Consent, Coercion, and Limit: The Me

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