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Will the British retain the monarchy and the English church
establishment into the 21st century? The preservation of the
monarchy and of the establishment of the church of England is a
matter that cuts deep in fact and theory. The monarchy and the
church are symbols of civil liberty, and as such they carry the
freight of British national identity. Yet it is difficult to take
those institutions seriously now because Britons give too little
consideration to serious reforms of any kind for the monarchy or
the church. This book suggests possible reforms.
The public display of grief that accompanied the funeral of the
late Princess of Wales drew attention to the many Britons who had
found an affinity with Diana. Seeking an explanation for this
affinity, Taylor argues that, during Diana's brief time in the
world spotlight, Britain underwent a change in values and a shift
in national identity from a system based almost exclusively on
household and family values to one more accepting of individual
autonomy and self-interest. Accustomed to royalty as symbols of
national values and identity, persons of resentment (women, people
of color, and homosexuals) found the divorced princess an apt
symbol of their transvalued values. These groups declared ignoble
the Queen, Prince Charles, and others who had previously been the
patterns for nobility in British society, and they held up Diana as
one truly noble.
The British monarchy had come to symbolize household and family,
but disaffected groups found themselves excluded from this model.
While royal adultery and divorces were long characterized by a
double standard, the Princess of Wales was able to win over
considerable public sympathy to her plight. By the 1990s, British
household size and structure had changed so dramatically that a
challenge to a traditionally based family value system was well
timed. Women, people of color, and homosexuals saw in Diana's life
their own transformation in identity that now found greater
acceptance in the larger society.
Gregory King (1648-1712) was an engraver, herald, surveyor, and
Secretary to the Commissioners for the Public Accounts, but he is
best known for his 1696 estimates of the wealth and population of
England. Writing in 1696, but calculating for the year 1688, he put
the population at approximately 5.5 million. Historians have
recently doubted the accuracy of these estimates. In this book,
John A. Taylor argues that King was an honest compiler of
statistics, and that his eccentric calculations based on the
available 1696 data were motivated by the problems he faced.
Because he used only empiricism and shop arithmetic, the 1696
estimates were probably as accurate as anyone in the 17th century
could have made them. Gregory King (1648-1712) was an engraver,
herald, surveyor, and Secretary to the Commissioners for the Public
Accounts, but he is best known for his 1696 estimates of the wealth
and population of England. Writing in 1696, but calculating for the
year 1688, he put the population at approximately 5.5 million.
Historians have recently doubted the accuracy of these estimates.
In this book, John A. Taylor argues that King was an honest
compiler of data whose eccentric calculations of the 1696 data
available to him were motivated by the problems he faced. Because
he used only empiricism and shop arithmetic, the 1696 estimates
were probably as accurate as anyone in the 17th century could have
made them. This first book-length study of King's work positions
his successes and shortcomings as a statistician within the context
of the whole ongoing failure of statisticians to construct a method
of exact prediction about human society. In addition to this
valuable commentary, Taylor also includes reprints of several
scarce but very important documents by or about King, including
King's 1696 estimates of national population and wealth, his
autobiography, his essay on the naval trade of England, his letter
on Queen Anne's Bounty, and the life of King written by George
Chalmers.
Full Title: "Addresses Delivered by John A. Taylor, in The Cases of
Burroughs and Fuchs, Who Were Indicted and Tried for Murder at Oyer
and Terminer of The Supreme Court Held in Kings County, N.
Y."Description: "The Making of the Modern Law: Trials, 1600-1926"
collection provides descriptions of the major trials from over 300
years, with official trial documents, unofficially published
accounts of the trials, briefs and arguments and more. Readers can
delve into sensational trials as well as those precedent-setting
trials associated with key constitutional and historical issues and
discover, including the Amistad Slavery case, the Dred Scott case
and Scopes "monkey" trial."Trials" provides unfiltered narrative
into the lives of the trial participants as well as everyday
people, providing an unparalleled source for the historical study
of sex, gender, class, marriage and divorce.++++The below data was
compiled from various identification fields in the bibliographic
record of this title. This data is provided as an additional tool
in helping to insure edition identification: ++++Kings CountyCourt
RecordYale Law LibraryNew-York: S.S. Peloubet & Company, Law
Booksellers and Publishers. 1882.
After the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, a group of Britons
began to apply quantitative analysis to policy. This they called
'political arithmetic'. Applying mathematical method to the study
of the practical problems of statecraft and commerce, they made
extensive use of observed data and pioneered the use of actuarial
tables. This study explores to what extent they owed their ideas to
Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes, etc; and whether they did indeed use
Baconian method.
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