



( 2 reviews )
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( 3 of 3 found this review helpful ) Posted: Apr 22 2006
There's lots of talk about religion and politics and separations of church and state: here's what two of the leaders of the early American Republic thought about religion and politics and their affect on American life in "YE WILL SAY I AM NO CHRISTIAN": THE THOMAS JEFFERSON/JOHN ADAMS CORRESPONDENCE ON RELIGION, MORALS AND VALUES. Granted, it's a specialty item which will probably receive its best audience in advanced high school to college-level holdings; but the letters between the two greats offer frank assessments of church, liberty and freedom of religion and should not be missed by any serious reader of American history or political science.
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( 3 of 4 found this review helpful ) Posted: Feb 23 2006
I hope the readers will appreciate discovering Jefferson and Adams in their own words, as I did when I first discovered these letters. The book permits both men to speak for themselves on matters of religion, morals, and values. In addition, if the reader then goes on to read some of the authors and texts cited in over 300 footnotes, one will find other valuable sources of wisdom and ethics. Read from and about Dupuis, Volney, Marcus Aurelius, Priestley, Epictetus, Madame de Stael, for instance, and you will perhaps find the same fascination I did in lives lived long before our time.


















