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  1. 1 de ene. de 1986 · There is a newer edition of this item: The New Inquisition: Irrational Rationalism and the Citadel of Science. $17.04. (73) Only 4 left in stock (more on the way). The New Inquisition dares to confront the disease of our time; Fundamentalist Materialism. Wilson explains, I am opposing the Fundamentalism, not the Materialism.

  2. The Spanish Inquisition was founded in 1478 by Ferdinand and Isabella to maintain Catholic orthodoxy in their kingdoms and was under the direct control of the Spanish monarchy. It was not definitively abolished until 1834, during the reign of Isabella II. The Inquisition, as a tribunal dealing with religious heresy, had jurisdiction only over baptized Christians.

  3. 30 de abr. de 2007 · The New Inquisition is recommended for all frontline library staff and highly recommended for library administrators and managers who respond to formal intellectual challenges.” ― Public Libraries “James LaRue offers fresh advice on dealing with requests to pull books from public library collections.

  4. The Spanish Inquisition, however, properly begins with the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic and Isabella. The Catholic faith was then endangered by pseudo-converts from Judaism (Marranos) and Mohammedanism (Moriscos). On 1 November, 1478, Sixtus IV empowered the Catholic sovereigns to set up the Inquisition.

  5. 31 de mar. de 2023 · The Inquisition was among the first bodies in Mexican history to crack down on drugs. In this case, inquisitors found themselves dealing with a phenomenon unlike anything they had encountered in Europe — the religious use of hallucinogenic plants. The issue demonstrates another adaptation by the Inquisition to its New World context.

  6. An exceptionally wide-ranging work, The New Inquisitions begins with early Christianity, and traces heretic-hunting as a phenomenon through the middle ages and right into the twentieth century, showing how the same inquisitional modes of thought recur both on the political Left and on the political Right.”

  7. The only book of its kind, The New Inquisitions is an exhilirating investigation into the intellectual origins of totalitarianism. Arthur Versluis unveils the connections between heretic hunting in the early and medieval Christianity, and the emergence of totalitarianism in the twentieth century. He shows how 'secular' political thinkers in the nineteenth century inaugurated a tradition of ...