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A Vindication of Natural Society (1757)

by Edmund Burke

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871311,445 (3.58)None
This is a new edition of Edmund Burke's first work, originally issued anonymously in 1756 as a letter attributed to 'a late noble writer'. In 1757 Burke produced a revised version with a new preface but still did not attach his name to the work. This Liberty Fund edition is based on the 1757 revision. The 'Vindication' is a political and social satire ridiculing the popular enlightenment notion of a pre-civil 'natural society'.… (more)
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Edmund Burke's "Vindication..." was very controversial when it was first published in 1756, revised 1757. Whether this was intended to be taken seriously or merely satirical remains unanswered. There is certainly some liberties taken with historical figures & numbers exaggerated. Yet there are very interesting points suggesting that philosophical idealism is no different from religious fanaticism. The writer makes very pointed explanations that the current (in his day) situation continues the same abuse of others hiding behind societal justifications for mistreatment so as to live above everyone else. It was such as these accusations that made this book very controversial for that day, saying the current rulers were no different than the tyrants & oppressors of ancient times. Was this really meant to be pointing toward the truth hiding behind satire or something else entirely? ( )
  walterhistory | Jun 23, 2021 |
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This is a new edition of Edmund Burke's first work, originally issued anonymously in 1756 as a letter attributed to 'a late noble writer'. In 1757 Burke produced a revised version with a new preface but still did not attach his name to the work. This Liberty Fund edition is based on the 1757 revision. The 'Vindication' is a political and social satire ridiculing the popular enlightenment notion of a pre-civil 'natural society'.

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