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  • Cited by 14
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
December 2009
Print publication year:
2001
Online ISBN:
9780511598517

Book description

The third and concluding volume of Maurice Cowling's magisterial sequence examines three related strands of English thought - latitudinarianism, the Christian thought which has assumed that latitudinarianism gives away too much, and the post-Christian thought which has assumed that Christianity is irrelevant or anachronistic. As in previous volumes, Maurice Cowling conducts his argument through a series of encounters with individual thinkers, including Burke, Disraeli, the Arnolds, Tennyson and Tawney in the first half, and Darwin, Keynes, Orwell, Leavis and Berlin in the second. Central to the whole is Mr Cowling's contention that the modern mind cannot escape from religion. Religion and Public Doctrine in Modern England represents a massive contribution to the intellectual and cultural history of modern England, of interest to historians, literary and cultural critics, theologians, philosophers, economists, as well as to that broader reading public with a serious interest in the making of the English mental landscape.

Reviews

‘ … this concluding offering is of such sophistication and subtlety of thought …’.

Professor Edward Norman Source: Church Times

‘ … this will be recognised as a very important book.’

Professor Edward Norman Source: Church Times

‘This book, like the two volumes that preceded it, is a masterpiece of invective and erudition. No one can pretend to understand the intellectual background to our times without reading it.’

Source: Country Life

‘Reading it provides a very remarkable experience.’

Source: Catholic Herald

‘Religion and Public Doctrine in Modern England is a remarkable book, quite sui generis…This dense yet witty work is worth whole shelves of the cultural studies that are coming to supersede the real work of history.’

Source: Government and Opposition

‘It is a magnificent achievement and Catholic schools will want this volume in the school library even if they do nto have the previous two.’

Mentor Magazine

‘… the trilogy will be compulsory, and perhaps even compulsive, reading for anyone interested in the place occupied by Christianity as a ‘public doctrine’ in England over the last century and a half.’

Journal of Ecclesiastical History

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