Heresy: Its Utility And Morality. A Plea And A Justification
Charles Bradlaugh
5 chapters
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5 chapters
A PLEA AND A JUSTIFICATION
A PLEA AND A JUSTIFICATION
HERESY: ITS UTILITY and MORALITY...
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CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION
What is heresy that it should be so heavily punished? Why is it that society will condone many offences, pardon many vicious practices, and yet have such scant mercy for the open heretic, who is treated as though he were some horrid monster to be feared and hated? Most religionists, instead of endeavouring with kindly thought to provide some solution for the difficulties propounded by their heretical brethren, indiscriminately confound all inquirers "in one common category of censure; their view
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CHAPTER II. THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY
CHAPTER II. THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY
It requires a more practised pen than mine to even faintly sketch the progress of heresy during the past three centuries, but I trust to say enough to give the reader an idea of its rapid growth and wide extension. I say of the past three centuries, because it is only during the past three hundred years that heresy has made the majority of its converts amongst the mass of the people. In earlier times heretics were not only few, but they talked to the few, and wrote to the few, in the language of
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CHAPTER III. THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
CHAPTER III. THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
The seeds of inquiry sown in the sixteenth century resulted in a fruitful display of advanced opinions during the next age. In the page of seventeenth century history, more names of men, either avowedly heretics, or charged by the orthodox with heresy, or whose labours can be shown to have tended to the growth of heresy, may probably be recorded than can be found during the whole of the previously long period during which the Christian Church assumed to dominate and control European thought. The
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CHAPTER IV. THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
CHAPTER IV. THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
The eighteenth century deserves that the penman who touches its records shall have some virility; for these records contain, not only the narrative of the rapid growth of the new philosophy in France, England, and Germany, where its roots had been firmly struck in the previous century, but they also give the history of a glorious endeavour on the part of a down-trodden and long-suffering people, weakened and degraded by generations of starvation and oppression, to break the yoke of tyranny and s
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