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I propose to write a monograph about John Spencer (1630-93), a most remarkable scholar who rose to become master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (1667) and University Preacher. Spencer discovered, more sharply than his contemporaries, the laws of religious evolution. It was during the seventeenth-century transformation of discourse on religion, when a handful of scholars, both Catholic and Protestant, recognized, in distinct ways and from distinct perspectives, the multiplicity of observable religions—past and present. In due course, comparisons would come to be stripped of their polemics, and, would come to recognize the correspondence between cults and beliefs, near and distant in time and place. From Christian perspective, serious scholarship about “other” peoples, mainly Jews and Muslims evolved gradually, alongside a renewed appreciation of, and fascination with, the ancient Near East.
Spencer’s Cambridge was home to a distinguished tradition had been appointed a lecturer in Hebrew at St. John's College. Spencer governed Corpus "with great prudence and reputation" for twenty-six years, after which he became a great benefactor of the College. He also was dean of Ely since 1677. In 1669, Spencer published in Cambridge his Dissertatio de Urim et Thumim, a prelude to the larger work, the De legibus hebraeorum ritualibus et earum rationibus libri tres. Published in Cambridge in 1685 and in Amsterdam the following year, De legibus includes various studies Spencer had written for approximately twenty years. It is his magnum opus and transformed scholarship.
Spencer was an excellent Hebraist, whose abilities and reading were not limited to the Hebrew Bible. Spencer surveyed a wide range of medieval Hebrew works ...
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... (and as was true of Maimonides), the political dimensions of the respublica hebraeorum are the object of constant discussions, in the relatively free political and intellectual English climate. Even in Catholic France, this would later happen, and an intellectual thread can be followed from Claude Fleury's Les moeurs des Israe'lites to Montesquieu's and Rousseau's reflections on ideal society. Scholars and thinkers writing at the end of the seventeenth century, and in the first decades of the eighteenth, studied Spencer: from Bayle and Jurieu to Basnage, Calmet, and Vico. It is the combination of philology and orientalism, of anthropological sensitivity and the will to communicate scholarly achievements to broader audiences, which permitted some of the most impressive intellectual achievements of the Enlightenment, and the work of Spencer looms large in them.
"Morton, Thomas - Introduction." Literary Criticism (1400-1800). Ed. Thomas J. Schoenberg. Vol. 72. Gale Cengage, 2002. eNotes.com. 2006. 21 Feb, 2011
“Religion is the backbone of evolution.” Without the cultural differences and belief systems we would not have a regulated religious base. It is evident some religions can be both alike but yet still very different. The historical William Bradford and Jonathan Edwards demonstrate this theory. William Bradford portrays more leniencies while allowing for more religious tolerance within the puritan community. With some contrasting beliefs but familiar goals, Jonathan Edwards, pursued a stricter religious background. Both of these author’s play an important role in sculpting the puritan way of life.
René de Chateaubriand, François. The Beauties of Christianity. The Hebrew Bible In Literary Criticism. Ed. and Comp. Alex Preminger and Edward L. Greenstein. New York: Ungar, 1986. 445.
...limits are exceeded through the establishment of the currency , which is not perishable. Locke is also convinced that an economy based on private property and unlimited accumulation of wealth generate economic development overall infinitely superior to the pre-bourgeois models : a small piece of land cultivated privately , he notes , makes it a hundred times more than they would if left in the common property.
Boyer, Pascal. Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought. New York, NY: Basic Books, 2001.
Smart, Ninian. "Blackboard, Religion 100." 6 March 2014. Seven Dimensions of Religion. Electronic Document. 6 March 2014.
Schoenberg, T. J. (2001). Bradford, William - Introduction. "Literary Criticiem (1400-1800). Retrieved March 2011, from enotes.com/literacy-criticism: www.enotes.com/literary-criticism/bradford-williams
Kretzmann, N. et al (1989). The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy : From the Rediscovery of Aristotle to the Disintegration of Scholasticism, 1100-1600. Paperback: New York.
The growth of religious ideas is environed with such intrinsic difficulties that it may never receive a perfectly satisfactory exposition. Religion deals so largely with the imaginative and emotional nature, and consequently with such an certain elements of knowledge, the all primitive religions are grotesque to some extent unintelligible. (1877:5)
Text and Texture:Close Readings of Selected Biblical Texts, Fishbane, Michael, Schocken Books, New York 1979 pp3-39
King, Martin Luther Jr. “The Influence of the Mystery Religions on Christianity.” The Papers of Martin Luther King, Jr.: Volume I: Called to Serve. Clayborne Carson, Ralph Luker, and Penny A. Russell, eds. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992. The Martin Luther King, Jr. Papers Project. Clayborne Carson, dir. Stanford University. 1 Feb. 2002 .
John Locke's, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690), was first criticized by the philosopher and theologian, John Norris of Bemerton, in his "Cursory Reflections upon a Book Call'd, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding," and appended to his Christian Blessedness or Discourses upon the Beatitudes (1690). Norris's criticisms of Locke prompted three replies, which were only posthumously published. Locke has been viewed, historically, as the winner of this debate; however, new evidence has emerged which suggests that Norris's argument against the foundation of knowledge in sense-perception that the Essay advocated was a valid and worthy critique, which Locke did, in fact, take rather seriously. Charlotte Johnston's "Locke's Examination of Malebranche and John Norris" (1958), has been widely accepted as conclusively showing that Locke's replies were not philosophical, but rather personal in origin; her essay, however, overlooks critical facts that undermine her subjective analysis of Locke's stance in relation to Norris's criticisms of the Essay. This paper provides those facts, revealing the philosophical—not personal—impetus for Locke's replies.
Church History in Plain Language is written by Bruce L. Shelley. This work focuses on the history of Christianity from 6 B.C. to the current period. It covers some of Christianity’s greatest events, theologians, and the various subsection of Christianity. Other than the events leading up to the death of Jesus, I had very little knowledge of Christianity’s history. After reading through the book, I have gained understanding on the Christian Councils, scholasticism, Christendom, and modern trends of Christianity.
A Century of Theological and Religious Studies in Britain, 1902–2007 by Ernest Nicholson 2004 pages 125–126
3. Gaukroger, Stephen. Francis Bacon and the Transformation of Early Modern Philosophy. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2001. Print.