Browse by category
Common Sense: And the American Crisis by Thomas Paine
$21.99 AUD
Category: Critical Thinking
Common Sense is the book that created the modern United States. Thomas Paine's incendiary call for Americans to revolt against British rule converted millions to the cause of independence and set out a vision of a just society liberated from the yoke of the crown. Published anonymously in 1776, six mont ...Show more
Common Sense, the Rights of Man and Other Essential Writings of Thomas Paine by Thomas Paine
$11.95 AUD
Category: Critical Thinking
Paineas daring prose paved the way for the Declaration of Independence and the Revolutionary War. This volume also includes a"The Crisis," a a"The Age of Reason," a and a"Agrarian Justice."a
THE AGE OF REASON by PAINE THOMAS
$11.95 AUD
Category: Critical Thinking | Series: Dover Value Editions Ser.
The Age of Reason: Being an Investigation of True and Fabulous Theology, a deistic treatise written by eighteenth-century British radical and American revolutionary Thomas Paine, critiques institutionalized religion and challenges the inerrancy of the Bible. Published in three parts in 1794, 1795, and 1 ...Show more
The Age of Reason by Thomas Paine
$25.95 AUD
Category: Critical Thinking
The Age of Reason is one of the most influential defences of Deism (the idea that God can be known without organized religion) ever written.
The Rights of Man by Thomas Paine
$22.99 AUD
Category: Critical Thinking | Series: The\Penguin American Library
One of the great classics on democracy, "Rights of Man" was published in England in 1791 as a vindication of the French Revolution and a critique of the British system of government. In direct, forceful prose, Paine defends popular rights, national independence, revolutionary war, and economic growth - ...Show more
The Rights of Man and Common Sense by Thomas Paine
$24.99 AUD
Category: Critical Thinking
Tom Paine is celebrated for the part he played in both the American and French Revolutions. Though an Englishman by birth, he reacted violently against the political order of eighteenth-century England and in favour of radical reform. So well thought of was he outside Great Britain that he became a dist ...Show more
0 - 5 of 6