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Edmund Burke

Enlightenment
Burke writes Reflections in London study, tradition as partnership across generations, revolution fire outside window.
Society is inheritance.
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Burke was a Dublin-born statesman and writer who supported the American colonists and the reform of empire, yet recoiled in horror from the French Revolution. Society, he argued, is not a machine to be redesigned by theory but a living inheritance, a contract between the dead, the living, and the unborn, and reform must prune rather than uproot. His Reflections on the Revolution in France warned that abstract reason loosed upon tradition would end in terror, a prophecy events soon honored. From his prudence and his distrust of grand schemes, modern conservative thought traces its descent.

Birth
1729 CE·Dublin

Born in Dublin

Born in Dublin and trained in law, he moved to London to live by his pen and entered politics.

Words

“Society is a partnership between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born.”

— Edmund Burke
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