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- catalog abstract "Compilation of writings from 550 B.C. to the present on the topics of peace, nonviolence, civil disobedience and passive resistance.".
- catalog contributor b1804986.
- catalog contributor b1804987.
- catalog contributor b1804988.
- catalog created "1965, c1963.".
- catalog date "1965".
- catalog date "1965, c1963.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1965, c1963.".
- catalog description "Bertrand Russell sets out the case for nonviolent civil disobedience in combating the nuclear peril -- James R. Newman suggests : "Let our children go" -- Albert Luthuli explains why Africans have chosen nonviolence to turn enmity into amity -- Robert Pickus shows that pacifism is working in most areas of life except war -- Harris Wofford presents the lawyer's case for civil disobedience -- Martin Luther King, Jr. traces his pilgrimage to nonviolence -- Peace organizations give their rules for public witness demonstrations -- Jerome D. Frank declares that war-making man is modifiable -- Erich Fromm defines his one main concern -- Maurice F. McCrackin refuses to pay taxes if the money is used to prepare for war.".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. [475]-483.".
- catalog description "Compilation of writings from 550 B.C. to the present on the topics of peace, nonviolence, civil disobedience and passive resistance.".
- catalog description "Continued 1 : Arle Brooks defends his refusal to register for the draft -- Richard B. Gregg assures pacifists that the sacrifice of oneself is an affirmation of a greater unity -- Milton S. Mayer anounces he is "going to sit this one out" -- George Lansbury calls on all European nations to abolish war -- Lord Ponsonby insists that teaching hate is a crime -- Gerald Heard diagnoses war as a symptom of a diseased civilization -- Aldous Huxley shows that peace is a by-product of a certain way of life -- Sherwood Eddy explains how he made his decision for peace -- Ernst Toller offers a program for teaching the love of peace -- Guglielmo Ferrero finds war nothing but a form of collective suicide -- Simone Weil asks if a revolution can be accomplished without war.".
- catalog description "Continued 2: Friedieric Passy salutes the future of arbitration -- Jean de Bloch describes the burdens of "armed peace" -- Leo Tolstoy pleads for each man to follow his own reason and conscience -- Herbert Sepncer deplores the cry of "our country, right or wrong!" -- Alfred Love urges a friend not to seve as a chalpian in the Civil War -- Elihu Burritt proposes a working man's strike against war -- William Lloyd Garrison denies that nonresistance is a state of "passivity" -- Victor Hugo calls on all nations to hasten the day of international unity -- Henry David Thoreau calls men to the duty of civil disobedience -- Theodore Parker protests against the Mexican War.".
- catalog description "Immanuel Kant outlines the basis of perpetual peace -- Job Scott shows war to be incompatible with Christianity -- Anthony Benezet warns that the consequences of war are timeless -- William Penn demonstrates that peace is not merely the end of war -- Robert Barclay cites the Christian roots of nonviolence -- James Nayler exalts peace on his deathbed -- George Fox swears to Oliver Cromwell that he will do no violence -- Hugo Grotius points out that in the confilct of arms, laws are silent -- Erasmus questions whether man was shaped to war -- Menno Simons condemns the use of carnal weapons.".
- catalog description "Kirby Page reminds nations that the only defense against atomic war is the prevention of all war -- Albert Camus visualizes an endless struggle between violence and friendly presuasion -- Albert Einstien believes a permanent peace cannot be prepared by threats -- Arthur Wiser explans why he walked out of Civilian Public Service Camp no. 94 -- Evan Thomas explains that peace can be demanded only on the basis of conscience -- Henry Miller says: "Murder the Murderer" -- Harry Emerson Fosdick explains why he cannot participate in a war even if the United States is drawn into it -- Ernest Fremont Tittle states the case for Christian pacifism.".
- catalog description "Mark Twain forsees war a million years ahead -- Emma Goldman calls "prepardness" the road to universal slaughter -- Romain Rolland calls for an end to the homicidal fury in Europe -- Karl Liebknecht votes "no" in the Reichstag -- Abdu'l Bahia deplores man's descent to slaying -- Havelock Ellis predicts that peace will offer great scope for daring and adventure -- William James proposes a moral equivalent of war -- Charles E. Jefferson urges Christians to batter down institutions that make war -- Jane Addams observes the passing of the war virtues -- Bertha von Suttner explains how she came to write Lay Down Your Arms -- Clarence Darrow decries violence and force as punishment.".
- catalog description "Pope John XXIII asks the world to halt the arms race -- Lillian Smith writes of a strange kind of love -- Rajendra Prasad calls for unilateral disarmament -- Danilo Dolci asks humanity to cure itself of violence -- Leo Szilard suggests the election of government officials solely on the issue of war and peace -- Harold Taylor says the time has come for intellectuals to come to terms with the issues of war and peace -- Sidney Lens condemns civil defense for giving a treacherous sense of security -- James Farmer reports on a Freedom Ride -- Herbert Read calls for a revolt of the instincts of man against the threat of mass destruction.".
- catalog description "Roger Baldwin refuses to obey the draft -- Siegfried Sassoon speaks for the soldiers -- John Reed asks, "Whose war?" -- Max Eastman challenges conscription -- Randolph Bourne takes the American intellectuals to task for their lack of thinking -- Norman Thomas makes a plea for the conscientious objector -- Norman Angell answers the question, "If a German attacked your wife ..." -- Hermann Hesse challenges a minister of state to end the dilemma of war -- Meyer London speaks in Congress against declaring war on Germany -- Alfred H. Fried predicts that pacifism will survive its failure to prevent the First World War -- Floyd Dell explains his special brand of nonresistance.".
- catalog description "Saint Martin withdraws from Julian's Army -- Maximilian refuses to be conscripted into the Roman army -- Origen says Christians need not fight for their kings -- Tertullian asks if it is lawful to make an occupation of the sword -- Agrippa urges the Jews not to undertake war against the Romans -- The Bible -- Asoka proclaims no living beings are to be killed -- Aristophanes' Lysistrata strikes for peace -- Motse shows that the gentlemen of the world are confused about the difference between righteousness and unrighteousness -- Buddha pities a man who abuses him -- Lao-Tse says that he who rejoices at the destruction of human life is not fit to be trusted with power.".
- catalog description "Stephen King-Hall presents a plan for the nonviolent resistance of enemy occupation -- Abraham Cronbach says the the only national defense is international amity -- Linus Pauling urges research for peace -- Albert Schweitzer calls for a new trust among all peoples -- Fifty-two Nobel Laureates plead for nations to renounce force -- A.J. Muste discusses the workability of nonviolence -- Martin Buber believes that genuine dialogue between people can overcome conflict -- Vinoba Bhave is not afraid of world wars, but rather of small wars and quarrels -- Norbert Wiener points out that to provide scientific information is not necessarily an innocent act -- Emil Brunner perceives that war has begun to outlive its purpose.".
- catalog description "Stephen Wise warns his congregation against supporting the deepest and most terrible sin of men -- Roderick Seidenberg describes the prison life of conscientious objectors -- Sigmund Freud examines the nature of man's aggressive instincts -- Mahatma Gandhi describes his means of battle -- Toyohiko Kagawa says violence is its own destruction -- John Haynes Holmes see pacifism taking hold in personal relationships -- Rosika Schwimmer petitions for naturalization -- Judah Magnes supports the right of all men to speak freely -- Scott Nearing shows war to be a social curse -- Eugene V. Debs offers his defense to the court -- G.F. Nicolai shows that morality and humanity are inseparable.".
- catalog description "Thomas Cooper says the regeneration of the world depends on moral resistance -- Charles Sumner declares the victories of peace to be higher than the triumphs of war -- William Jay insists that man is not compelled to do evil -- William E. Channing asks, "Has the duty of obeying government no bounds?" -- Adin Ballou charts a course for nonresistants -- Ralph Waldo Emerson declares that the cause of peace is not the cause of cowardice -- Thomas Carlyle describes the soldiers of Dumdrudge -- Thomas Grimke calls the law of violence the law of murder -- Joshua P. Blanchard envisions a patriotism based on pacific principles -- William Ladd urges men to give public testimony for peace -- Thomas Hancock condemns "necessity" as an excuse for war -- Jonathan Dymond suggests that civil disobedience is the final duty of Christians -- Noah Worchester shows that war is the effect of a popular delusion.".
- catalog extent "xxiv, 486 p. ;".
- catalog issued "1965".
- catalog issued "1965, c1963.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Boston : Beacon Press,".
- catalog subject "JX1952 .W44 1965x".
- catalog subject "Peace.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Bertrand Russell sets out the case for nonviolent civil disobedience in combating the nuclear peril -- James R. Newman suggests : "Let our children go" -- Albert Luthuli explains why Africans have chosen nonviolence to turn enmity into amity -- Robert Pickus shows that pacifism is working in most areas of life except war -- Harris Wofford presents the lawyer's case for civil disobedience -- Martin Luther King, Jr. traces his pilgrimage to nonviolence -- Peace organizations give their rules for public witness demonstrations -- Jerome D. Frank declares that war-making man is modifiable -- Erich Fromm defines his one main concern -- Maurice F. McCrackin refuses to pay taxes if the money is used to prepare for war.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Continued 1 : Arle Brooks defends his refusal to register for the draft -- Richard B. Gregg assures pacifists that the sacrifice of oneself is an affirmation of a greater unity -- Milton S. Mayer anounces he is "going to sit this one out" -- George Lansbury calls on all European nations to abolish war -- Lord Ponsonby insists that teaching hate is a crime -- Gerald Heard diagnoses war as a symptom of a diseased civilization -- Aldous Huxley shows that peace is a by-product of a certain way of life -- Sherwood Eddy explains how he made his decision for peace -- Ernst Toller offers a program for teaching the love of peace -- Guglielmo Ferrero finds war nothing but a form of collective suicide -- Simone Weil asks if a revolution can be accomplished without war.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Continued 2: Friedieric Passy salutes the future of arbitration -- Jean de Bloch describes the burdens of "armed peace" -- Leo Tolstoy pleads for each man to follow his own reason and conscience -- Herbert Sepncer deplores the cry of "our country, right or wrong!" -- Alfred Love urges a friend not to seve as a chalpian in the Civil War -- Elihu Burritt proposes a working man's strike against war -- William Lloyd Garrison denies that nonresistance is a state of "passivity" -- Victor Hugo calls on all nations to hasten the day of international unity -- Henry David Thoreau calls men to the duty of civil disobedience -- Theodore Parker protests against the Mexican War.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Immanuel Kant outlines the basis of perpetual peace -- Job Scott shows war to be incompatible with Christianity -- Anthony Benezet warns that the consequences of war are timeless -- William Penn demonstrates that peace is not merely the end of war -- Robert Barclay cites the Christian roots of nonviolence -- James Nayler exalts peace on his deathbed -- George Fox swears to Oliver Cromwell that he will do no violence -- Hugo Grotius points out that in the confilct of arms, laws are silent -- Erasmus questions whether man was shaped to war -- Menno Simons condemns the use of carnal weapons.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Kirby Page reminds nations that the only defense against atomic war is the prevention of all war -- Albert Camus visualizes an endless struggle between violence and friendly presuasion -- Albert Einstien believes a permanent peace cannot be prepared by threats -- Arthur Wiser explans why he walked out of Civilian Public Service Camp no. 94 -- Evan Thomas explains that peace can be demanded only on the basis of conscience -- Henry Miller says: "Murder the Murderer" -- Harry Emerson Fosdick explains why he cannot participate in a war even if the United States is drawn into it -- Ernest Fremont Tittle states the case for Christian pacifism.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Mark Twain forsees war a million years ahead -- Emma Goldman calls "prepardness" the road to universal slaughter -- Romain Rolland calls for an end to the homicidal fury in Europe -- Karl Liebknecht votes "no" in the Reichstag -- Abdu'l Bahia deplores man's descent to slaying -- Havelock Ellis predicts that peace will offer great scope for daring and adventure -- William James proposes a moral equivalent of war -- Charles E. Jefferson urges Christians to batter down institutions that make war -- Jane Addams observes the passing of the war virtues -- Bertha von Suttner explains how she came to write Lay Down Your Arms -- Clarence Darrow decries violence and force as punishment.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Pope John XXIII asks the world to halt the arms race -- Lillian Smith writes of a strange kind of love -- Rajendra Prasad calls for unilateral disarmament -- Danilo Dolci asks humanity to cure itself of violence -- Leo Szilard suggests the election of government officials solely on the issue of war and peace -- Harold Taylor says the time has come for intellectuals to come to terms with the issues of war and peace -- Sidney Lens condemns civil defense for giving a treacherous sense of security -- James Farmer reports on a Freedom Ride -- Herbert Read calls for a revolt of the instincts of man against the threat of mass destruction.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Roger Baldwin refuses to obey the draft -- Siegfried Sassoon speaks for the soldiers -- John Reed asks, "Whose war?" -- Max Eastman challenges conscription -- Randolph Bourne takes the American intellectuals to task for their lack of thinking -- Norman Thomas makes a plea for the conscientious objector -- Norman Angell answers the question, "If a German attacked your wife ..." -- Hermann Hesse challenges a minister of state to end the dilemma of war -- Meyer London speaks in Congress against declaring war on Germany -- Alfred H. Fried predicts that pacifism will survive its failure to prevent the First World War -- Floyd Dell explains his special brand of nonresistance.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Saint Martin withdraws from Julian's Army -- Maximilian refuses to be conscripted into the Roman army -- Origen says Christians need not fight for their kings -- Tertullian asks if it is lawful to make an occupation of the sword -- Agrippa urges the Jews not to undertake war against the Romans -- The Bible -- Asoka proclaims no living beings are to be killed -- Aristophanes' Lysistrata strikes for peace -- Motse shows that the gentlemen of the world are confused about the difference between righteousness and unrighteousness -- Buddha pities a man who abuses him -- Lao-Tse says that he who rejoices at the destruction of human life is not fit to be trusted with power.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Stephen King-Hall presents a plan for the nonviolent resistance of enemy occupation -- Abraham Cronbach says the the only national defense is international amity -- Linus Pauling urges research for peace -- Albert Schweitzer calls for a new trust among all peoples -- Fifty-two Nobel Laureates plead for nations to renounce force -- A.J. Muste discusses the workability of nonviolence -- Martin Buber believes that genuine dialogue between people can overcome conflict -- Vinoba Bhave is not afraid of world wars, but rather of small wars and quarrels -- Norbert Wiener points out that to provide scientific information is not necessarily an innocent act -- Emil Brunner perceives that war has begun to outlive its purpose.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Stephen Wise warns his congregation against supporting the deepest and most terrible sin of men -- Roderick Seidenberg describes the prison life of conscientious objectors -- Sigmund Freud examines the nature of man's aggressive instincts -- Mahatma Gandhi describes his means of battle -- Toyohiko Kagawa says violence is its own destruction -- John Haynes Holmes see pacifism taking hold in personal relationships -- Rosika Schwimmer petitions for naturalization -- Judah Magnes supports the right of all men to speak freely -- Scott Nearing shows war to be a social curse -- Eugene V. Debs offers his defense to the court -- G.F. Nicolai shows that morality and humanity are inseparable.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Thomas Cooper says the regeneration of the world depends on moral resistance -- Charles Sumner declares the victories of peace to be higher than the triumphs of war -- William Jay insists that man is not compelled to do evil -- William E. Channing asks, "Has the duty of obeying government no bounds?" -- Adin Ballou charts a course for nonresistants -- Ralph Waldo Emerson declares that the cause of peace is not the cause of cowardice -- Thomas Carlyle describes the soldiers of Dumdrudge -- Thomas Grimke calls the law of violence the law of murder -- Joshua P. Blanchard envisions a patriotism based on pacific principles -- William Ladd urges men to give public testimony for peace -- Thomas Hancock condemns "necessity" as an excuse for war -- Jonathan Dymond suggests that civil disobedience is the final duty of Christians -- Noah Worchester shows that war is the effect of a popular delusion.".
- catalog title "Instead of violence : writings by the great advocates of peace and nonviolence throughout history / edited and with notes and introductions by Arthur and Lila Weinberg.".
- catalog type "text".