Time and History in Opposition Rhetoric

2020 ◽  
pp. 161-210
Author(s):  
Tony Claydon

Chapter four first traces the chronological perceptions of the Jacobites who refused to accept the revolution and continued to support the claims of James II to be king. It demonstrates that whilst they used precedent, and so static chronology, to some extent, the core of their case was a theory of degeneration since 1688–9: an argument that created a dynamic and human-driven sense of time, quite unlike their Williamite opponents. The chapter then shows how these ideas were taken up by the country-Tory opposition of the late 1690s, particularly in the standing army debates, and the convocation controversy. It stresses the paradox of dynamic chronologies emerging most strongly among the most conservative forces in late Stuart England

2019 ◽  
pp. 104-134
Author(s):  
Katie Jarvis

After the Assembly overhauled the currency system and issued assignats in denominations too large for retail trade, a small change shortage rocked the nation. To facilitate marketplace exchanges, the Dames, their suppliers, their clients, and other merchants turned to promissory notes. These bills were inadequately backed by local financial societies and contributed to rapid inflation. Beginning in 1790, the lack of practical cash spurred market actors to innovatively ally across guilds and occupational boundaries. Vegetable merchants formed coalitions with carpenters to demand new assignat denominations, retailers joined forces with brokers to protect promissory notes, and clients and merchants rallied to support overlapping credit networks. Thus, the Dames and their allies forged novel socioeconomic associations before the Le Chapelier law and d’Allarde decree legally dismantled the corporate world in 1791. Money thus became a concrete conduit for effecting the core social transformations at the heart of the Revolution. While spurring the state to protect the monetary networks of productive citizens, the Dames and their allies also changed the trajectory of national currency reform.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 393-423
Author(s):  
Max Gottschlich

The paper addresses the scope of the human relationship to nature. This scope encompasses a twofold emancipation. The first emancipation is the emancipation from nature that enables the domination of nature by science and technology. The second emancipation is the emancipation from this first emancipation, stemming from the insight that we have to conceive of nature, and respect nature accordingly, as another self that displays itself. I argue that it is precisely the step towards such second emancipation that lies at the core of the revolution of our consciousness of nature that currently seems to be unfolding. Yet the urgent question arises as to how such a “liberation of nature” (Hegel) can be understood sustainably without falling behind the achievements of Kantian philosophy, into a dogmatic ontology or even naturalism. The article delineates a systematic answer to this question by addressing some crucial points in Kant and Hegel.


1980 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 211-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Zaller

To Clarendon, the English Civil War was an exercise in folly, pride, and the tragic corruption of the species. Since then, many a thesis has been advanced to explain the Great Rebellion, only to fall before fresh generations of skeptics, each demolishing a predecessor's orthodoxy to set up their own. But old notions die hard. They linger in the words and concepts that once expressed them, which remain impregnated with the old meaning even when the nominal definitions have changed. Such a concept is that of the “Opposition” in early Stuart England. Its history is virtually coextensive with the historiography of the English Revolution, and it remains today at the center of the debate on the origins and meaning of the Revolution.The concept of an Opposition in prerevolutionary England can be traced back to the eighteenth century. David Hume, writing of the 1620s, saw party conflict as an inherent and fundamentally progressive element in the clash between privilege and prerogative. The “wise and moderate,” he asserted, “regarded the very rise of parties as a happy prognostic of the establishment of liberty.” Here already is the germ of the Whig interpretation, which emerges full-blown a century later in Macaulay: [W]hen, in October of 1641, the Parliament reassembled after a short recess, two hostile parties, essentially the same with those which, under different names, have ever since contended, and are still contending, for the direction of public affairs, appeared confronting each other. During some years they were designated as Cavaliers and Roundheads. They were subsequently called Tories and Whigs; nor does it seem that these appellations are likely soon to become obsolete.


1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
William L. Sachse

Among the major political upheavals which have been called revolutions, the English Revolution of 1688 is generally recognized as extraordinary. Long accepted among moderate Englishmen as “glorious,” a revolution to end revolutions, in more radical quarters it has not been regarded as constituting a true revolution. Contemporary Russian opinion, for example, refuses to bestow upon it this accolade, regarding it as a mere coup d'état. Its conservatism, its legalism, its bloodlessness, the absence of zeal to be found among its protagonists: all contribute to this point of view. That these are characteristics of the Glorious Revolution cannot be denied. More precisely, they characterize the actions of the leaders of the Revolution — of the councillors and legislators and soldiers whose names are known. Of popular opinion and aspiration much less is known, and it is probable that little can be discovered in the surviving evidence. But they can be assessed, to some degree, by following the actions of the mob — or, more accurately, the mobs — as they erupted in London and other parts of the Kingdom.Mob disturbances, like the plague, were more or less endemic in Stuart England. Roger North, in his Examen, asserts that “the Rabble first changed their Title, and were called the mob” in the gatherings of the Green Ribbon Club. Regardless of when the term was first used, seventeenth-century Englishmen were well acquainted with various manifestations of mob activity. England's growing urban population augmented the mob, and before Shaftesbury, Pym had demonstrated that he was aware of the existence of this popular force and of the uses to which it could be put.


2019 ◽  
pp. 93-105
Author(s):  
Wilfredo Kapsoli Escudero

ResumenEn 1975 la Universidad Ricardo Palma publicó el libro Sublevaciones de Esclavos en el Perú, s. XVIII. Por primera vez en la historia nacional se revelaban sucesos ocultos e ignorados durante siglos. Tras 41 años, la suerte nos deparó un hallazgo extraordinario: el programa y el libreto de la representación coreográfica basada en dicho libro y realizada bajo la dirección de Rolando Campos y del poeta César Calvo. Precisamente, este documento es el núcleo delas anotaciones y comentarios para demostrar la historia del primer grito de la libertad e independencia protagonizado por los esclavos antes de la Revolución de Túpac Amaru II. La recreación artístico-musical, así como las reflexiones históricas que aporta este encuentro forman parte del Bicentenario en el Aula. Palabras claves: esclavitud, libertad, Perú Negro, independencia, Lorenzo Mombo, César Calvo. AbstractIn 1975, the Ricardo Palma University published my book Sublevaciones de Esclavos en el Perú s. XVIII. For the first time in national history, events that had been hidden and ignored for centuries were revealed. After 41 years, luck brought us an extraordinary discovery: the program and the booklet of the choreographic representation based on this book and made under the direction of Rolando Campos and the poet César Calvo. Precisely this document is the core of the annotations and comments to demonstrate the history of the first cry of Freedom and Independence starring the slaves before the Revolution ofTúpac Amaru II. The artistic - musical recreation, as well as the historical reflections that this meeting brings are part of the Bicentennial. Keywords: Slavery, freedom, Black Peru, independence, Lorenzo Mombo, César Calvo.


2002 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan N. Stone

A summary of the recent published research suggests that the “top” academic accounting journals ignore systems and technology research topics. Fortuitously, the core focus of the Journal of Information Systems is exactly the set of accounting-related systems and technology issues (e.g., system controls, financial implications of technology) that are underexplored in both the MIS and accounting research literatures. Accounting systems and technology research, and the Journal of Information Systems, have an optimistic future. Developing accounting systems and technology research demands that researchers both value and promote excellence while simultaneously encouraging diversity.


STADION ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-114
Author(s):  
Udi Carmi

In the early 1970s, the German fencing coach Emil Beck invented a new training model that deviated from the traditional French and Italian schools. Beck's model, named for the fencing club he established, Tauberbischofsheim, revolutionized the way fencing was taught. It was a rational, formal system based on McDonaldization - the economic consumption paradigm developed by sociologist George Ritzer. This article studies the Tauberbischofsheim training model as a turning point in the history of fencing. It analyzes the core principles of the system and the revolution it brought about. The McDonaldization paradigm applied to fencing undermined the basic tenets of fencing instruction, introducing a rational coaching plan and individualized lessons chosen from a pre-set menu. The coach became more of a guide than a trainer. For the first time, it was possible to teach fencing without being a consummate professional or an expert in the traditional instruction methods. The success of Beck's students has been unprecedented in the world of fencing.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 510-515
Author(s):  
Viktor EFIMOV ◽  
◽  
Nikolay ABRAMKIN ◽  
Vladimir VERNIGOR ◽  
Behruz KHAKIMOV ◽  
...  

In Russian practice, at the author of the mines of the revolution, equipment was used, which was well made at the pest of domestic factories. In view of the core bankruptcy of the domestic factories, the coat of arms of the miners were forced to carry the burden and had the choice to buy foreign equipment.. In 90-ies tax on trail equipment, which was not produced in Russian boards, was not collected at all. The miners bought the equipment abroad, without any additional problems for the equipment import did not arise. Powered roof support and shearers are not produced in Russia and the plants had to buy them abroad both the avalanche and the separate equipment. The term fund "complex" pest has a conditional blue character, the conclusion reflecting taking only the stage of the kinematic announcement of the connection, the input of the electrohydraulic and if the electronic system suddenly controls interchangeable author sets of equipment address. temperament It is advisable to revise the concept of more classification of the kiln cleaning mechanized complexes and the lighthouse to adjust the core of the customs due to legislation to address some of the tinder customs duties on the author of the mining equipment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido Gainotti

Abstract The target article carefully describes the memory system, centered on the temporal lobe that builds specific memory traces. It does not, however, mention the laterality effects that exist within this system. This commentary briefly surveys evidence showing that clear asymmetries exist within the temporal lobe structures subserving the core system and that the right temporal structures mainly underpin face familiarity feelings.


Author(s):  
T. Kanetaka ◽  
M. Cho ◽  
S. Kawamura ◽  
T. Sado ◽  
K. Hara

The authors have investigated the dissolution process of human cholesterol gallstones using a scanning electron microscope(SEM). This study was carried out by comparing control gallstones incubated in beagle bile with gallstones obtained from patients who were treated with chenodeoxycholic acid(CDCA).The cholesterol gallstones for this study were obtained from 14 patients. Three control patients were treated without CDCA and eleven patients were treated with CDCA 300-600 mg/day for periods ranging from four to twenty five months. It was confirmed through chemical analysis that these gallstones contained more than 80% cholesterol in both the outer surface and the core.The specimen were obtained from the outer surface and the core of the gallstones. Each specimen was attached to alminum sheet and coated with carbon to 100Å thickness. The SEM observation was made by Hitachi S-550 with 20 kV acceleration voltage and with 60-20, 000X magnification.


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