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William Ames and the Settlement of Massachusetts Bay

New England Quarterly-A Historical Review of New England Life and Letters, 1966
A MONG the stars which sparkled in Cotton Mather's firmament of New England history was William Ames, a man who never set foot in the New World. To the New England Puritans, Ames was "that profound, that sublime, that subtil, that irrefragable,-yea, that angelical doctor"; and even Cotton Mather had to tax his vocabulary to picture Ames with suitable ...
K. L. Sprunger
exaly   +3 more sources

Quaker and Chiliast: The “contrary thoughts” of William Ames and Petrus Serrarius

Religious Currents and Cross-Currents: Essays on Early Modern Protestantism and the Protestant Enlightenment, 1999
Jan de Bruijn   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

The Assimilation of Machiavelli in English Thought: The Casuistry of William Perkins and William Ames

Huntington Library Quarterly, 1954
M oRE than thirty years ago Benedetto Croce called for examination of the points of contact between the new Renaissance political thought and the apparently contradictory ideas of the Reformation.1 He thought that the assimilation of Machiavelli's ideas in the West might contain valuable clues as to how such contact had been accomplished.
G. Mosse
openaire   +2 more sources

Dialectique ramiste et conscience puritaine : le cas de William Ames (1576-1633)

open access: yesRevue des sciences philosophiques et théologiques, 2019
William Ames (1576-1633) a incarné une autorité fondamentale pour les puritains qui ont émigré en Nouvelle-Angleterre. Dans son œuvre, il a la singularité d’allier ses convictions religieuses à une mentalité ramiste.
Laura Adrián Lara
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

‘Doctrina Deo vivendi’: William Ames, the Nature and Sources of His Voluntarism

Reformation & Renaissance Review, 2019
ABSTRACTTo establish his vision of theology as the doctrine of ‘living to God,’ William Ames, the English puritan theologian exiled in The Netherlands, strongly emphasized the will as the seat of f...
Takayuki Yagi
openaire   +2 more sources

Choice and Action: William Ames's Concept of the Mind's Operation in Moral Decisions

Church History, 1987
When William Ames (1576–1633) chose not to wear a surplice while preaching at a Cambridge University chapel, he embodied the Reformation spirit of defiance toward the symbols of ecclesiastical and educational authority. This action and subsequent signs of dissent within the Church of England earned Ames a life of exile in the Netherlands.
L. Boughton
openaire   +2 more sources

William Ames, M.A.

Notes and Queries, 1916
A. Matthews
openaire   +2 more sources

William Ames's Technometry

Journal of the History of Ideas, 1972
L. Gibbs
openaire   +2 more sources

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