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Utopia

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First published in Latin in 1516, Utopia was the work of Sir Thomas More (1477–1535), the brilliant humanist, scholar, and churchman executed by Henry VIII for his refusal to accept the king as the supreme head of the Church of England.
In this work, which gave its name to the whole genre of books and movements hypothesizing an ideal society, More envisioned a patriarchal island kingdom that practiced religious tolerance, in which everybody worked, no one has more than his fellows, all goods were community-owned, and violence, bloodshed, and vice nonexistent. Based to some extent on the writings of Plato and other earlier authors, Utopia nevertheless contained much that was original with More.
In the nearly 500 years since the book's publication, there have been many attempts at establishing "Utopias" both in theory and in practice. All of them, however, seem to embody ideas already present in More's classic treatise: optimistic faith in human nature,...

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Product Details
Dover Publications
0486110702 / 9780486110707
eBook (EPUB)
335.02
29/02/2012
English
85 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
Reprint. This Dover edition, first published in 1997, is an unabridged republication of "More's Utopia" from Ideal commonwealths / with an introduction by Henry Morley. 10th ed. London : Routledge & Sons, 1885. A new note was prepared specially for this edition Derived record based on unviewed prin