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Dialogues and Rousseau
In 1776, he completed Dialogues: Rousseau Judge of Jean-Jacques and began work on the Reveries of the Solitary Walker.
Previous elements in this group included The Confessions and Dialogues: Rousseau, Judge of Jean-Jacques.

Dialogues and Judge
* Video of Judge Jones on Judicial Independence-Difficult Dialogues series September 26, 2006.

Dialogues and published
In 1539, urged by Pietro Bembo, he visited Venice and delivered a remarkable course of sermons, showing a decided tendency to the doctrine of justification by faith, which appears still more evidently in his Dialogues published the same year.
But his famous Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion were not published until 1779, by which time deism had almost vanished in England.
After returning to Basel, Servetus published Two Books of Dialogues on the Trinity () which caused a sensation among Reformers and Catholics alike.
While at the school, Stearns wrote and published a number of education-related works, including Dramatic Dialogues for Use in Schools ( 1798 ), a collection of 30 original plays that were performed by the students.
During his time in office as the President of Slovenia, he wrote and published several books in spiritual philosophy, including Misli o življenju in zavedanju (" Thoughts on Life and Consciousness "), Zlate misli o življenju in zavedanju (" Golden Thoughts on Life and Consciousness "), Bistvo sveta (" The Essence of the World "), and his last one called Pogovori or Dialogues.
The poetry would resurface later, most notably in a book ( finally published in 1980 by NYU press ) called 12 Dialogues in which Andre and Frampton took turns responding to one another at a typewriter using mainly poetry and free-form essay-like texts.
Contemporaneously, in 1688, the French philosopher Nicolas Malebranche published his Dialogues on Metaphysics and Religion, thus contributing to the genre's revival in philosophic circles.
The next year he published the work Dialogorum de Trinitate ( Dialogues on the Trinity ) and the supplementary work De Iustitia Regni Christi ( On the Justice of Christ's Reign ) in the same volume.
His economic reputation was made by a book written in the French language and published 1769 in Paris, namely, his Dialogues sur le commerce des blés, " Dialogues on the commerce in wheat ".
Nevertheless Lawes continued his work as a composer, and the famous collection of his vocal pieces, Ayres and Dialogues for One, Two and Three Voyces, was published in 1653 and followed by two other books under the same title in 1655 and 1658 respectively.
Among these may be mentioned the Lehrbuch der griechischen Antiquitäten ( new ed., 1889 ) dealing with political, religious and domestic antiquities ; the Geschichte und System der Platonischen Philosophie ( 1839 ), unfinished ; an edition of the Platonic Dialogues ( 6 vols, 1851 – 1853 ); and Culturgeschichte der Griechen und Römer ( 1857 – 1858 ), published after his death by CG Schmidt.
1757 Latin edition of the Dialogues of Luisa Sigea ( first published c. 1660 ) by Nicholas Chorier
In 1925, Eckart's unfinished essay Der Bolschewismus von Moses bis Lenin: Zwiegespräch zwischen Hitler und mir (" Bolshevism from Moses to Lenin: Dialogues Between Hitler and Me ") was published posthumously, although it has been shown ( Plewnia 1970 ) that the dialogues were an invention ; the essay was written by Eckart alone.
Some of the rare and important works in this collection are: A Grammar of the Bengal Language ( 1778 ) by Nathaniel Brassey Halhed, which is the earliest printed book in Bengali, Henry Forster ’ s A Vocabulary in Two parts, English and Bangalee ( 1799 ), William Carrey ’ s Dialogues, Intended to Facilitate the Acquiring of the Bengali Language ( 1801 ), Ram Ram Basu ’ s Raja Pratapaditya Charitra ( 1801 ), Mrityunjay Vidyalankar ’ s Batris Simhansan ( 1802 ), Ramayana translated by Krittibas and published in five volumes, Mahabharat translated by Kashi Ram Das ( 1802 ), Chandicharan Munshi ’ s Tota Itihas ( 1805 ), Jayanarayan Ghosal ’ s Sri Karunanidhanavilasa ( 1814 ), William Carey ’ s Dictionary of the Bengali Language, 2 volumes ( 1815-1825 ).
His first book illustrations were published in 1893 in To the Other Side by Thomas Rhodes, but his first serious commission was in 1894 for The Dolly Dialogues, the collected sketches of Anthony Hope, who later went on to write The Prisoner of Zenda.
The most important was his version of the Gita, published in 1785 as Bhagvat-geeta, or Dialogues of Kreeshna and Arjoon ( London: Nourse, 1785 ).
There is an allusion to the story in David Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion ( published in 1779 ):
The scripts of 12 of the 21 " Dagenham Dialogues " were published in a book of that title by Methuen in 1971 ( reissued 1988 ).
In 1542 he published his Four Books of Sacred Dialogues in Latin and French.
Upon return to Amsterdam in 1703 he published his three most famous works: Nouveaux Voyages dans l ’ Amerique Septentrionale, Memoires de l ’ Amerique Septentrionale and Supplement aux Voyages ou Dialogues avec le sauvage Adario.
The Dialogues were published posthumously in 1779, originally with neither the author's nor the publisher's name.

Rousseau and Judge
* In the field of government, Rider graduates include: Nathaniel Barnes, Liberian Ambassador to the United Nations ; Frederick W. Donnelly, former Mayor of Trenton, New Jersey ; Robert E. Grossman, Judge on the U. S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York ; David Rousseau, MBA, former New Jersey State Treasurer ; and Mark S. Schweiker, MA, 44th Governor of Pennsylvania.

Rousseau and Jean-Jacques
Jean-Jacques Rousseau of Geneva was the first of many to present the Alps as a place of allure and beauty, banishing the prevalent conception of the mountains as a hellish wasteland inhabited by demons.
Jean-Jacques Ampère, a successful merchant, was an admirer of the philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, whose theories of education ( as outlined in his treatise Émile ) were the basis of Ampère ’ s education.
Augustine ( 354 – 430 ) applied the title Confessions to his autobiographical work, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau used the same title in the 18th century, initiating the chain of confessional and sometimes racy and highly self-critical, autobiographies of the Romantic era and beyond.
The Swiss philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau sent him the message: " Tell him I know no greater man on earth.
Also famous as a prose stylist, Hume pioneered the essay as a literary genre and engaged with contemporary intellectual luminaries such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Adam Smith ( who acknowledged Hume's influence on his economics and political philosophy ), James Boswell, Joseph Butler, and Thomas Reid.
He met and later fell out with Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
In 1742 he befriended Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
They were brought together by their friend in common at that time, Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
The Tao Te Ching focuses upon the beginnings of society, and describes a golden age in the past, comparable with the ideas of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Progressive education can be traced as far back as to the works of John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, with both being respectively known as paternal forerunners to the ideas that would be demonstrated by the likes of Dewey.
In France, there was Lettres persanes ( 1721 ) by Montesquieu, followed by Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloïse ( 1761 ) by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Laclos ' Les Liaisons dangereuses ( 1782 ), which used the epistolary form to great dramatic effect, because the sequence of events was not always related directly or explicitly.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau et les origines françaises du fascisme.
Hegel, French materialist and utilitarian philosophe Claude Adrien Helvétius, Swiss collectivist philosophe Jean-Jacques Rousseau, French utopian socialist Henri de Saint-Simon, and Savoyard conservative Joseph de Maistre as thinkers who constituted the ideological basis for modern authoritarianism, in his book Freedom and Its Betrayal: Six Enemies of Human Liberty.
Two of the most outspoken critics of the guild system were Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Adam Smith, and all over Europe a tendency to oppose government control over trades in favour of laissez-faire free market systems was growing rapidly and making its way into the political and legal system.
Many other French philosophes ( intellectuals ) exerted philosophical influence on a continental scale, including Voltaire, Denis Diderot and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, whose essay The Social Contract, Or Principles of Political Right was a catalyst for governmental and societal reform throughout Europe.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau would argue, however, that his concept of " general will " in the " social contract " is not the simple collection of individual wills and precisely furthers the interests of the individual ( the constraint of law itself would be beneficial for the individual, as the lack of respect for the law necessarily entails, in Rousseau's eyes, a form of ignorance and submission to one's passions instead of the preferred autonomy of reason ).
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (; 28 June 17122 July 1778 ) was a Genevan philosopher, writer, and composer of 18th-century Romanticism of French expression.
Among other things, the ship of the line Jean-Jacques Rousseau ( launched in 1795 ) was named after the philosopher.
* Confessions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau ( Les Confessions ), 1770, published 1782
* The Political writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, edited from the original MCS and authentic editions with introduction and notes by C. E. Vaughan, Blackwell, Oxford, 1962.
* Confessions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau English translation, as published by Project Gutenberg, 2004 # 3913
The Question of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

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