In this study of the British upper and middle classes during the first half of the 19th century Boyd Hilton reveals that the people of this age were obsessed with catastrophe: wars famines pestilences revolutions floods volcanoes and the great commercial upheavals which periodically threatened to topple the world''s first capitalist system. The dominant evangelical sentiment of the day interpreted such sufferings as part of God''s plan and not wanting to interfere with the dispensations of providence governments took a harsh stand-on-your-own-feet attitude towards social underdogs whether they were bankrupts or paupers. In this work Hilton studies how the transformation of religious thought--including new ideas about the nature of God and the Atonement--affected the economics philosophy science and politics of the period.
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