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"Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth," by David Hume, 1754.
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American scientist and author of science fiction. He has won the Hugo, Locus, Campbell] and Nebula Awards. His novel The Postman was adapted into a 1997 feature film starring Kevin Costner. (From : Wikipedia.org.)
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A British historian, specialising in 18th-century France, who is most notable for his one-volume Oxford History of the French Revolution (1st edition, 1989; 2nd edition, 2002; 3rd edition, 2018). (From : Wikipedia.org.)
"The Sermon of the Fifty," by Voltaire, translated by Joseph McCabe. Quoted from "A Treatise on Toleration and Other Essays," Prometheus Books, 1994, originally published by 1752.
"Homily on the Interpretation of the New Testament," by Voltaire, translated by Joseph McCabe. Quoted from "A Treatise on Toleration and Other Essays," Prometheus Books, 1994.
"The Essays: Religious Meditations, Places of Perswasion and Disswasion, Seene and Allowed," by Francis Bacon, 1597.
"The Labor Movement and Anarchism," by Errico Malatesta, December, 1925, From Errico Malatesta: The anarchist revolution: Polemical articles 1924-1931, Freedom Press.
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A former British international wheelchair fencer, ambassador for anti bullying, stigma and hate crime for the United Kingdom and CEO of The Adrian Derbyshire Foundation. He was a member of the Great Britain Fencing Squad, and British National Wheelchair Sabre champion of 2010 and has won 2 gold and 3 silver domestic medals. (From : Wikipedia.org.)
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An authority on Gothic art and architecture, with particular expertise in stained glass, especially the stained glass of France and the glazing programs of the abbey of Saint-Denis and cathedrals of Beauvais and Rouen. (From : Swarthmore.edu.)
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An American art historian, educator, and curator. A scholar of medieval and Spanish art, Stokstad was Judith Harris Murphy Distinguished Professor of Art History Emeritus at the University of Kansas, and also served as Director of the Spencer Museum of Art. (From : Wikipedia.org.)
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A Connecticut politician who served 28 years in the Connecticut House of Representatives and, from April through September, 1908, was president of the Connecticut Agricultural College, which is now the University of Connecticut. (From : Wikipedia.org.)
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Professor of Sociology, Department of Urban Affairs, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. (From : tandfonline.com.)
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An American sociologist, educator, and best-selling commentator on American society. (From : Wikipedia.org.)
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Grant McConnell ?37, September 27, 1993, at his home in Bonny Doon, California. He was a distinguished political scientist and an ardent conservationist. After graduating from Reed, Grant was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford in 1938?39 and also studied at Cambridge and Harvard. (From : Reed.edu.)
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A Prussian physician and politician. In particular, he campaigned for equal rights for Jews. (From : Wikipedia.org.)
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A priest involved in revolutionary, Mexican, Oaxacan politics. (From : RevoltSource.com.)
"German Women to Their Sisters in Great Britain," by Klara Zetkin, December 1913, From The Labour Woman, page 111.
"And the Truth Shall Make You Free: A Speech on the Principles of Social Freedom," by Victoria C. Woodhull and Stephen Pearl Andrews, Delivered in Steinway Hall, Monday, Nov. 20, 1871.
"The Tyranny of the Clock," by George Woodcock, first published in War Commentary - For Anarchism mid-march 1944.
"Is There a Life Beyond the Grave?" by Charles Watts, a Reply to R.B. Westbrook, AM., D.D. (1894).
"The Civil Rights Movement: What Good Was It?," an essay by Alice Walker, written in the Winter of 1966-1967. Quoted from The Portable Sixties Reader, edited by Ann Charters, a Penguin Classics, pages 82-83.
"The Tenement-House Exhibition of 1899," by Lawrence Veiller, Charities Review 10 (1900-1901), 19-25.
"The Instinct of Workmanship and the Irksomeness of Labor," by Thorstein Veblen, American Journal of Sociology, volume 4 (1898-99).
"Russian Jews as Desirable Immigrants," by Ida M. Van Etten, Forum, 15 (1893):pp.172-182.
"Tao Teh King," or, "The Tao and Its Characteristics," by Lao Tzu, circa 600, BC, translated by James Legge, using the translation by Frederic H. Balfour as a secondary reference for obscure points.
"Hua Hu Ching," by Lao Tzu, circa 600, BC.
"The War Prayer," by Mark Twain. Written approximately 1904-05; quoted from Albert Bigelow Paine, ed., Europe and Elsewhere.
"Letters from the Earth," by Mark Twain. Published by Harper Perennial, edited by Bernard DeVoto. Published posthumously in 1962.
"State Socialism and Anarchism," by Benjamin R. Tucker, 1888.
"To the Working People," by Leo Tolstoy, Yasnaya Polyana, 1902, From The Complete Works of Count Tolstoy Vol XXIV (Latest Works/Life/General Index Biography) - Dana Estes & Co. - 1905 (pp. 131-169).
"To the Tsar and His Assistants," by Leo Tolstoy, March 15, o.s., 1901.
"'Thou Shalt Not Kill'," by Leo Tolstoy, August 8, o.s., 1900.
"A Letter to Russian Liberals," by Leo Tolstoy, August 31, O.S., 1896.
"Letter to a Non-Commissioned Officer," by Leo Tolstoy, 1898.
"A Letter to a Hindu: The Subjection of India- Its Cause and Cure," by Leo Tolstoy, With an Introduction by M. K. Gandhi, December 14th, 1908.
"The First Step," by Leo Tolstoy, 1891, translated by Louise and Alymer Maud in 1909.
"Slavery in Massachusetts," by Henry David Thoreau, 1906 Houghton Mifflin edition printing.
"The Service," by Henry David Thoreau, 1860.
"A Plea for Capt. John Brown," by Henry David Thoreau, 1860.
"Paradise (to be) Regained," by Henry David Thoreau, November, 1843.
"Life Without Principle," by Henry David Thoreau, 1863.
"The Landlord," by Henry David Thoreau, 1843.
"Dark Ages," by Henry David Thoreau, 1843.
"Civil Disobedience," by Henry David Thoreau, 1849.
"The British General Strike - Its Place in History," by August Thalheimer, Source: The Communist International, No. 22, 1926, pp. 42-58.
"The Ego and Its Own," by Max Stirner, 1845, publish date of 1844.
"The Poor in Summer," by Robert Alston Stevenson, Scribner's Magazine, XXX, (September 1901): 259-277.
"An Inquiry into the Principles of Political Economy," by Sir James Steuart, 1767.
"The Rights of Man," by Thomas Spence, A Lecture Read at The Philosophical Society, Newcastle upon Tyne, November 8th, 1775; 1793 Edition.
"An Interesting Conversation, between a Gentleman and the Author, on the Subject of the foregoing Lecture ["The Rights of Man"]," by Thomas Spence, (appended to The Rights of Man in the 1793 edition; perhaps also in previous editions).
"What's Happening In America," by Susan Sontag, published in the Partisan Review in 1966. Quoted from The Portable Sixties Reader, edited by Ann Charters, a Penguin Classics.
"Political Economy," by Jean-Charles-Leonard Simonde de Sismondi, 1815
"Three Lectures on the Rate of Wages," by Nassau Senior, 1830.
"On Class Conflict in General," by Gustav Schmoller, American Journal of Sociology, volume 20 (1914-15) pp. 504-531.
"An American View of the Congress," by Lucien Sanial, Source: Justice, August 22, 1896.
"Women of India," by Margaret Sanger, [Nov.] 1935. Source: Margaret Sanger Papers, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College , MSM S71:0817.
"Women Enslaved by Maternity," by Margaret Sanger, 16 May 1920. Source: Lloyd's Sunday News, May 16, 1920 , Margaret Sanger Microfilm C16:143.
"Women and Birth Control," by Margaret Sanger, May 1929. Source: North American Review, May 1929, 529-534 , MSM S71:159. For draft version, "One of Eleven," see LCM 130:419.
"Woman's Error and Her Debt," by Margaret Sanger, August 1921.
"Woman and War," by Margaret Sanger, June 1917. Source: Birth Control Review, June 1917, 5 , Margaret Sanger Microfilm S70:790.
"Woman And Birth Control," by Margaret Sanger, 1916. Source: Margaret Sanger Papers, Library of Congress, LCM 129:12.
"Why the Woman Rebel?" by Margaret Sanger, Mar 1912. Source: The Woman Rebel, Vol. 1, No. 1, March 1914 , 8 , Margaret Sanger Microfilm C16:0522.
"Why Not Birth Control Clinics in America?" by Margaret Sanger, Mar 1919. Source: American Medicine, Mar. 1919, 164-167; reprinted in May 1919 in the Birth Control Review, (MSM S70:821.).
"When Should A Woman Avoid Having Children?," by Margaret Sanger, Nov 1918. Source: Birth Control Review, Nov. 1918, 6-7, Margaret Sanger Microfilm S70:807.
"What Birth Control Can Do For India," by Margaret Sanger, 30 Nov 1935. Source: Edith How Martyn Papers, Eileen Palmer Collections, Wellcome Institute , MSMC16:384.
"Watchful Waiting," by Margaret Sanger, May 1914. Source: The Woman Rebel, Vol. 1, No. 3, May 1914, 24 , Margaret Sanger Microfilm C16:0538.
"The War's Lesson," by Margaret Sanger, Aug 1914. Source: The Woman Rebel, Vol. 1, No. 5, August 1914, 48 , Margaret Sanger Microfilm C16:562.
"Wanted-- A Bigger Motherhood," by Margaret Sanger, 1912. Source: Margaret Sanger Papers, Library of Congress , Library of Congress Microfilm 131:0108.
"Voluntary Motherhood," by Margaret Sanger, Mar 1917. Source: Margaret Sanger Papers, Library of Congress , LCM 131:104.
"Trapped!," by Margaret Sanger, Oct 1918. Source: Birth Control Review, Oct. 1918, 3 , LCM 16:119.
"The Tragedy of the Accidental Child," by Margaret Sanger, Apr 1919. Source: The Birth Control Review, Apr. 1919, 5-6, Margaret Sanger Microfilm S70:0819.
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