The Jacobitism of Berkeley's Passive Obedience

Journal of the History of Ideas 47 (2):309-319 (1986)
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Abstract

Why did the Lord Justices make strong representation against Berkeley? According to Joseph Stock, Berkeley's first biographer "Lord Galway [a Lord Justice in 1716] having heard of those sermons, published in 1712 as Passive Obedience represented Berkeley as a Jacobite, and hence unworthy of the living of St. Paul's. From the beginning, Passive Obedience was rumored to be politically heterodox...

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Supernatural Morality in Berkeley's Passive Obedience.Timo Airaksinen - 2020 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 37 (4):351-370.

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