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  1. Jean Bodin (born 1530, Angers, France—died June 1596, Laon) was a French political philosopher whose exposition of the principles of stable government was widely influential in Europe at a time when medieval systems were giving way to centralized states.

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  2. Mar 25, 2005 · 1. Bodins Life in Politics and Religion: Concord or Tolerance? 2. Bodins Methodology of History and Law. 3. Bodins religiosity: Did He Believe or Not? 4. Bodins Politics: Sovereignty or Absolutism? 5. Culture of a Renaissance Man: Economics, Sorcery, Naturalism. 5.1 Bodins theories on economics and finances. 5.2 Theories on Demons.

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jean_BodinJean Bodin - Wikipedia

    Jean Bodin (French: [ʒɑ̃ bɔdɛ̃]; c. 1530 – 1596) was a French jurist and political philosopher, member of the Parlement of Paris and professor of law in Toulouse. Bodin lived during the aftermath of the Protestant Reformation and wrote against the background of religious conflict in France.

  5. The humanist philosopher and jurist Jean Bodin was one of the most prominent political thinkers of the sixteenth century. His reputation is largely based on his account of sovereignty which he formulated in the Six Books of the Commonwealth.

  6. Summary. JEAN BODIN (1530–96), French humanist, lawyer, administrator, and scholar. Bodin was one of the first to attribute rising prices in sixteenth-century Europe to the influx of gold from America and he also wrote a book on the detection and punishment of witches.

  7. The account of sovereignty in the work of Jean Bodin was a major event in the development of European political thought. Bodin's precise definition of supreme authority, his determination of its scope, and his analysis of the functions that it logically entailed, helped turn public law into a scientific discipline.

  8. Mar 25, 2005 · 1. Bodin's Life in Politics and Religion: Concord or Tolerance? 2. Bodin's Methodology of History and Law. 3. Bodin's Religiosity: Did He Believe or Not? 4. Bodin's Politics: Sovereignty or Absolutism? 5. Culture of a Renaissance Man: Economics, Sorcery, Materialism. 6. Justice for Bodin: Open and Closed Questions. Bibliography.

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