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An inquiry into the accordancy of war with the principles of Christianity, and an examination of the philosophical reasoning by which it is defended

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First Sentence
"IN the attempt to form an accurate estimate of the moral character of human actions and opinions, it is often of importance to inquire how they have been produced."
124 pages
~2h 4min to read
Published 1834 W. Wood 1 views
ISBN
0344650790, 9780344650796
Editions
Paperback
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Hardcover
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Description

In his Inquiry, the early 19th-century Quaker philosopher Jonathan Dymond investigates the centuries-old question of whether war is compatible with the teachings of Christianity. Examining the question through both the lenses of Christian tradition and secular philosophy, Dymond argues that war is thoroughly incompatible with Christianity in its preceding causes, present reality, and following consequences. Much of the tract is dedicated to refuting the arguments of his opponents, such as claims that certain passages of the Bible sanction war or that the moral commandments of Christianity can be superseded on a case-to-case basis on utilitarian grounds of “expediency.” Dymond’s Inquiry was later cited by his fellow Christian pacifist Leo Tolstoy in The Kingdom of God Is Within You, further advancing Dymond’s argument that it is the duty of a Christian “mildly and temperately, yet firmly, to refuse to serve” in the military.

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