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Rights of Man | 
enlarge | Author: Thomas Paine Publisher: Naxos AudioBooks Category: Book
List Price: £16.99 Buy New: £7.40 You Save: £9.59 (56%)
New (28) Used (3) from £7.40
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 737129
Format: Abridged, Audiobook Media: Audio CD Edition: Abridged Pages: 4 Discs: 4 Number Of Items: 4 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.9 x 1
ISBN: 962634878X Dewey Decimal Number: 320 EAN: 9789626348789 ASIN: 962634878X
Publication Date: July 1, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: shrink-wrapped; read by David Rintoul; the seminal work on human freedom and equality; 4hours 37minutes; edited and abridged
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| Customer Reviews:
An Excellent Version of a Classic Work January 23, 2001 29 out of 31 found this review helpful
I bought this book over a year ago and it is a joy to read. The introduction by Michael Foot is informative and concise and helps set up the book in the correct historical context. Common Sense is one of the most important and under-rated tracts in history, influencing as it did the American revolution and therefore the French revolution and The Rights of Man is an eloquent argument against authoritarian rule and a call for democracy which was way ahead of its time and still extremely relevent. I urge you to buy it.
CONTINUING TO DEFEND THE RIGHTS OF HUMANITY TODAY July 5, 1999 60 out of 63 found this review helpful
The Rights of Man is a riposte to Edmund Burke's criticism of the French Revolution. Its message is the superiority of reason, in the form of Republican government armed with the Declaration of the Rights of Man, over despotism which holds populations in ignorance. With the American and French revolutions fresh in his mind, Paine was writing in a world on the threshold of freedom and that comes through in his forceful and forthright style. That said, and most important for the reader to appreciate, much of what he has to say still applies today. Paine in scathing in his critique of hereditary monarchy and privilege. He says "the idea of hereditary legislation is.......as absurd as an hereditary mathematician, or an hereditary wise man." He rejects the notion of government laws being justified by tradition and therefore irrevocable. His argument against Burke's defence of the 1688 revolution in England is perhaps the best in the book. Paine argues that the only thing that is truly hereditary is the Rights of Man : "The Rights of men in society, are neither devisable, nor transferrable, nor annihilable, but descendable only." The book is a superb polemic when both understood in its historical context and applied to world politics today. His arguments for reform of the House of Lords strike a particularly pertinent note. He expresses liberal doctrines that many people take for granted but in our own genocidal times Paine reminds us that many of the topics that impassioned him should continue to impassion everyone with an interest in humanity. The style of the writing may put off a few as many themes disappear and reappear throughout the book instead of being dealt with in a coherant whole. The fact that it was written in two parts and that he is one of the greatest pamphleteers of modern times should compensate for this minor irritation.
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