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James Martineau - James Martineau James Martineau (April 21, 1805 - January 11, 1900) was an English philosopher. He was born at Norwich, the seventh child of Thomas Martineau and Elizabeth Rankin, the sixth, his senior by almost three years, being his sister Harriet. They were descended from Gaston Martineau, a Huguenot surgeon and refugee, who married Marie Pierre in 1693, and settled in Norwich. His son and grandson--respectively the great-grandfather and grandfather of James Martineau--were surgeons in the same city, while his father was a manufacturer and merchant. James was educated at Norwich Grammar School under Edward Valpy, as good a scholar as his better-known brother Richard, but proved too sensitive for state school. He was sent to Bristol to the private academy of Dr Lant Carpenter, under.

Harriet Martineau - Harriet Martineau Harriet Martineau (June 12, 1802 - June 27, 1876), English writer, was born at Norwich, where her father was a manufacturer. The family was of Huguenot extraction (see James Martineau) and professed Unitarian views. The atmosphere of her home was industrious, intellectual and austere; she herself was clever, but weakly and unhappy; she had no sense of taste or smell, and moreover early grew deaf. At the age of fifteen the state of her health and nerves led to a prolonged visit to her father's sister, Mrs Kentish, who kept a school at Bristol. Here, in the companionship of amiable and talented people, her life became happier. Here, also, she fell under the influence of the Unitarian minister, Dr Lant Carpenter, from whose instructions, she.

Henry Longueville Mansel - contending that cognition of the ego as it really is is itself a fact of experience. Consciousness, he held--agreeing thus with the doctrine of "natural realism" which Hamilton developed from Reid--implies knowledge both of self and of the external world. The latter Mansel's psychology reduces to consciousness of our organism as extended; with the former is given consciousness of free will and moral obligation. A summary of his philosophy is contained in his article "Metaphysics " in the 5th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica (separately published, 1860). Mansel wrote also The Philosophy of the Conditioned (1866) in reply to John Stuart Mill's criticism of Hamilton; Letters, Lectures, and Reviews (ed. Chandler, 1873), and The Gnostic Heresies (ed. Joseph Barber Lightfoot, 1875, with a biographical sketch by Lord Carnarvon). He wrote a.

Unitarianism - and Hungary definitely anti-Trinitarian religious communities first formed and were tolerated. Poland Scattered expressions of anti-Trinitarian opinion appear here early. At the age of 80, Catherine, wife of Melchior Vogel or Weygel, was burned at Cracow (1539) for apostasy; whether her views embraced more than deism is not clear. The first synod of the Reformed Church took place in 1555; at the second (1556), Gregory Pauli (Grzegorz Paweł z Brzezin) and Peter Gonesius (Piotr z Goniądza) avowed anti-Trinitarian and anabaptist views. The arrival of Biandrata in 1558 furnished the party with a leader. In 1565 the diet of Piotrkow excluded anti-Trinitarians from the existing synod; henceforward they held their own synods as the Minor Church. Known by various other names (of which Polish brethren and Arian were the most common), at.

Another Country - Marxism have on him and the hypocrisy and snobbery of the English public school system. The original 1981 London production starred Colin Firth as Guy, James Newall as Tommy, Kenneth Branagh, and Daniel-Day Lewis. It won the Society of West End Theatre Awards honor as Play of the Year in 1982. In 1984, the play was adapted into a movie directed by Marek Kanievska and starring Rupert Everett as Guy along with Firth as Judd. Also starring are Michael Jenn (Barclay), Robert Addie (Delahay), Rupert Wainwright (Donald Devenish), Tristan Oliver (Fowler), Cary Elwes (James Harcourt), and Anna Massey (Imogen Bennett). The setting is an 1930s Eton-esque public school, where Guy Bennett and Tommy Judd are friends because they are both outsiders in their own ways. Bennett is openly homosexual, while Judd.

Aon Corporation - Denise Benedetto Jim Berger George John Bishop Susan Blair Harry Blanding Richard Blood Susan Bochino Darren Bohan Herman Broghammer Nancy Bueche James Cartier Kirsten Lail Christophe Eugene Clark Robert Colin Jean M. Collin John R. Crowe Lawrence Davidson Nereida DeJesus Colleen Deloughery Simon Dhanani Jennifer Dorsey (Howley-Dorsey) Yolanda Dowling Christine Egan (sister of Michael Egan) Michael Egan Lisa Caren Ehrlich Eric Evans Patricia M. Fagan Wendy Faulkner Mike Ferugio Lucy Fishman Noel Foster Gary Frank Richard Fraser Alan Friedlander Richard Gabrielle Pamela Gaff Julie Geis Donna Giordano Kim Girolamo Michelle Herman Goldstein Jenine Gonzalez Eileen Greenstein Florence Gregory Robert Gschaar Philip Guza Barbara Guzzardo Richard Hall Robert Halligan Donald G. Havlish, Jr Mark Hemschoot Molly Herencia Gary Herold Robert Higley Tara Hobbs Thomas Hohlweck Milagros "Millie" Hromada Farah Jeudy Linda Jones.

Augustus De Morgan - of age in the year .W The problem is indeterminate, but it is made strictly determinate by the century of its utterance and the limit to a man's life. His father was Col. De Morgan, who held various appointments in the service of the East India Company. His mother was descended from James Dodson, who computed a table of anti-logarithms, that is, the numbers corresponding to exact logarithms. It was the time of the Sepoy rebellion in India, and Col. De Morgan removed his family to England when Augustus was seven months old. As his father and grandfather had both been born in India, De Morgan used to say that he was neither English, nor Scottish, nor Irish, but a Briton "unattached," using the technical term applied to an undergraduate of.

Richard Holt Hutton - awarded the gold medal for philosophy. Meanwhile he had also studied for short periods at Heidelberg and Berlin, and in 1847 he entered Manchester New College with the idea of becoming a minister like his father, and studied there under James Martineau. He was not, however, called on by any church, and for some time his future was unsettled. In 1851, he married his cousin, Anne Roscoe, and became joint-editor with JL Sanford of the Inquirer, the principal Unitarian organ. His innovations and unconventional views about stereotyped Unitarian doctrines caused alarm, and in 1853 he resigned. His health had broken down, and he visited the West Indies, where his wife died of yellow fever. In 1855 Hutton and Bagehol became joint-editors of the National Review, a new monthly which lasted for.

Richard Cobden - this pamphlet was in the press, delicate health obliged him to leave England, and for several months, at the end of 1836 and the beginning of 1837, he travelled in Spain, Turkey and Egypt. During his visit to Egypt he had an interview with Mehemet Ali, of whose character as a reforming monarch he did not bring away a very favourable impression. He returned to England in April 1837. First steps in politics From that time Cobden became a conspicuous figure in Manchester, taking a leading part in the local politics of the town and district. Largely owing to his exertions, the Manchester Athenaeum was established, at the opening of which he was chosen to deliver the inaugural address. He became a member of the chamber of commerce, and soon infused.

Will (philosophy) - intellect to be choiceworthy, the various possibilities of choice being themselves presented by the understanding to the will. And though in a certain sense Divine foreknowledge is compatible upon his view with human freedom, the freedom with which men act is itself the product of Divine determination. Man is predetermined to act freely, and Divine foreknowledge foresees human actions as contingent. Duns Scotus on the other hand is the great champion of indeterminism. Upon his view the intellect must always be subordinate to the will, and to the will belongs the power of complete self-determination. Morality in effect-to such an extreme position is he driven in his opposition to the Thomists-becomes the arbitrary creation of the Divine Will and in no sense depends for its authority upon rational principles or is.

William George Ward - "Tract XC.," and wrote in defence of it. From that period Ward and his associates worked undisguisedly for union with the Church of Rome, and in 1844 he published his Ideal of a Christian Church, in which he openly contended that the only hope for the Church of England lay in submission to the Church of Rome. This publication brought to a height the storm which had long been gathering. The University of Oxford was invited, on February 13 1845, to condemn "Tract XC.," to censure the Ideal, and to degrade Ward from his degrees. The two latter propositions were carried and "Tract XC." only escaped censure by the non placet of the proctors, Guillemard and Church. Ward left the Church of England in September 1845, and was followed by many.

Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada - George Hamilton Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh Joseph Pierre Albert Sevigny Paul Martineau J.H. Theogene Ricard Martial Asselin Walter Lockhart Gordon Mitchell Sharp Allan MacEachen Yvon Dupuis Edgar John Benson Leo Alphonse Joseph Cadieux Lawrence T. Pennell Joseph Julien Jean-Pierre Cote John Napier Turner Louis Joseph Robichaud Dufferin Roblin Alexander B. Campbell Robert L. Stanfield Donald Stovel Macdonald John Carr Munro John-Eudes Dube Stanley Ronald Basford Eric William Kierans James Armstrong Richardson Otto Emil Lang Herb Gray Robert Douglas George Stanbury Jean-Pierre Goyer Alastair William Gillespie Martin Patrick O'Connell Patrick Morgan Mahoney Stanley Haidasz Eugene Francis Whelan William Warren Allmand James Hugh Faulkner Andre Ouellet Marc Lalonde Raymond Joseph Perrault Barnett Jerome Danson J. Judd Buchanan Romeo LeBlanc Pierre Juneau Marcel Lessard Jack Sydney George Cullen Leonard Stephen Marchand John Roberts.

Metaphysical Society - Metaphysical Society was a British society, founded in 1869 by James Knowles. Many of its members were prominent clergymen. The members from first to last were as follows: Dean Stanley John Robert Seeley Roden Noel James Martineau William Benjamin Carpenter James Hinton T H Huxley Charles Pritchard Richard Holt Hutton William George Ward Walter Bagehot James Anthony Froude Alfred Lord Tennyson Alfred Barry Lord Arthur Russell William Ewart Gladstone Henry Edward Manning James Knowles Lord Avebury Henry Alford Alexander Grant Connop Thirlwall Frederic Harrison Father Dalgairns Sir George Grove Shadworth Hodgson Henry Sidgwick Edmund Lushington Bishop Ellicott Mark Pattison the Duke of Argyll John Ruskin Robert Lowe, Viscount Sherbrooke Sir Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant-Duff William Rathbone Greg Alexander Campbell Fraser Henry Acland John Frederick Denison Maurice Archbishop Thomson Thomas Mozely Richard William.

List of Unitarian Universalists - Barton Alexander Graham Bell Henry Bergh Tim Berners-Lee James Blanchard Ray Bradbury Antoinette Brown Olympia Brown Luther Burbank Celia Burr Burleigh Robert Burns Percival Brundage John C. Calhoun W. E. Channing E. E. Cummings Nathaniel B. Currier Charles Darwin Charles Dickens Dorothea Dix Charles William Eliot Ralph Waldo Emerson Sophia Fahs Eliza Fallen Fannie Farmer Millard Fillmore Robert Fulghum Buckminster Fuller Margaret Fuller Elizabeth Gaskell Horace Greeley Edvard Grieg Charles Hartshorne Nathaniel Hawthorne Oliver Wendell Holmes Mark Hopkins Julia Ward Howe Thomas Jefferson Mary A. Livermore Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Amy Lowell James Russell Lowell Horace Mann James Martineau Herman Melville Maria Mitchell Samuel Finley Breese Morse Florence Nightingale Theodore Parker Sylvia Plath Linus Pauling Beatrix Potter Joseph Priestley Christopher Reeve Paul Revere Malvina Reynolds Benjamin Rush Michael Servetus Albert Schweitzer Charles.

List of Governors of Arkansas - Governors of Arkansas Territorial Governors, 1819-1836 James Miller 1819-1825 George Izard 1825-1828 Robert Crittenden (acting) 1828-1829 John Pope (Democrat) 1829-1835 William Savin Fulton (Democrat) 1835-1836 State Governors, 1836-present James Sevier Conway (Democrat) 1836-1840 Archibald Yell (Democrat) 1840-1844 Samuel Adams (Democrat, acting) 1844 Thomas Stevenson Drew (Democrat) 1844-1849 Richard C. Byrd (Democrat, acting) 1849 John Selden Roane (Democrat) 1849-1852 Elias Nelson Conway (Democrat) 1852-1860 Henry Massey Rector (Democrat) 1860-1862 Harris Flanagin (Democrat) 1862-1864 Isaac Murphy (Unionist) 1864-1868 Powell Clayton (Republican) 1868-1871 Ozra Amander Hadley (Republican, acting) 1871-1873 Elisha Baxter (Republican) 1873-1874 Augustus Hill Garland (Democrat) 1874-1877 William Read Miller (Democrat) 1877-1881 Thomas James Churchill (Democrat) 1881-1883 James Henderson Berry (Democrat) 1883-1885 Simon Pollard Hughes, Jr (Democrat) 1885-1889 James Philip Eagle (Democrat) 1889-1893 William Meade Fishback (Democrat) 1893-1895 James Paul Clarke (Democrat) 1895-1897.

List of ethicists - Christoph Eucken Johann Albert Fabricius Ismail al-Faruqi Nosson Zvi Finkel Owen Flanagan Michel Foucault Alexander Campbell Fraser Erich Fromm Buckminster Fuller Mohandas Gandhi Ghazali Carol Gilligan Newt Gingrich Victor Gollancz Thomas Hill Green Jurgen Habermas Hammurabi Henry Hazlitt Paul Hawken Claude Adrien Helvétius Frank Herbert Hergé Abraham Joshua Heschel Hierocles of Alexandria James Hinton Wau Holland Hans-Hermann Hoppe L. Ron Hubbard David Hume John Peters Humphrey - author of UN Declaration of Universal Human Rights Francis Hutcheson Thomas Henry Huxley Lauri Ingman Alija Ali Izetbegovic Jane Jacobs Paul Janet Thomas Jefferson Francis Jeffrey Jesus of Nazareth Pope John Paul II Théodore Simon Jouffroy Bill Joy Theodore Kacyzinski Immanuel Kant - Metaphysic of Ethics Rushworth Kidder Israel Kirzner Lawrence Kohlberg David Korten Peter Kropotkin Winona LaDuke George Lakoff Norman Lamm Ursula LeGuin.

List of Ottawa mayors - Henry J. Friel Mayors of Ottawa 1855-1857 - John Bower Lewis 1858-1859 - Edward McGillivray 1860-1862 - Alexander Workman 1863 - Henry J. Friel 1864-1866 - M.K. Dickinson 1867 - Robert Lyon 1868-1869 - Henry J. Friel 1870-1871 - John Rochester 1872-1873 - E. Martineau 1874-1875 - J.P. Featherston 1876 - G.B.L Fellows 1877 - W.H. Waller 1878 - C.W. Bangs 1879-1881 - Charles H. Mackintosh 1882-1883 - Pierre St. Jean, M.D. 1884 - C.T. Bate 1885-1886 - Francis McDougal 1887-1888 - McLeod Stewart 1889-1890 - Jacob Erratt 1891 - Thomas Birkett 1892-1893 - Olivier Durocher 1894 - George Cox 1985-1896 - William Borthwick 1897-1898 - Samuel Bingham 1899-1900 - Thomas Payment 1901 - W.D. Morris 1901 - James Davidson 1902-1903 - Fred Cook 1904-1906 - James A. Ellis 1906 -.

List of Circuit Judges of England and Wales - Christopher Hodson His Honour Judge Bennett His Honour Judge James His Honour Judge Earnshaw Her Honour Judge Pearce His Honour Judge Foley His Honour Judge Victor Hall His Honour Judge Cavell His Honour Judge Stanley His Honour Judge Peter Smith Her Honour Judge Daley His Honour Judge Martineau His Honour Judge Morris His Honour Judge Geddes His Honour Judge David Davies His Honour Judge Nash His Honour Judge Geake His Honour Judge Hucker His Honour Judge William Barnett QC His Honour Judge James Morris His Honour Judge Robbins His Honour Judge Allweis His Honour Judge Lowden His Honour Judge Sennitt His Honour Judge Joseph His Honour Judge Corrie His Honour Judge O'Rorke His Honour Judge Goldsack QC His Honour Judge Hamilton His Honour Judge Crompton His Honour Judge Fish His Honour.

Ken James - Ken James Ken James, born November 16, 1948 in Sydney, Australia is an actor known for regular roles in several popular television series. He played television actor Tony Wild in The Box and later was Mike O'Brien in Sons and Daughters. Other appearances include Skippy and Skyways..

King James Version of the Bible - King James Version of the Bible This article is part of the History of the English Bible series. Old English Bible translations John Wyclif William Tyndale Great Bible Bishops' Bible Geneva Bible Douai Bible King James Version of the Bible Revised Standard Version New American Standard Version New English Bible New International Version New Revised Standard Version The King James Version or Authorised Version of the Holy Bible was a translation in English for the benefit of the Church of England at the behest of King James I of England. First published in 1611, it was the authorized version for use in the Church of England and became perhaps the most influential English version in America. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Starting the project 2 Literary qualities.


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