- Introduction (I)
- Introduction (II)
- Philosophical foundations of Unitarianism – John Locke, the Moral Sense, and David Hartley
- Unitarianism’s social vision
- “Loose the female mind” – Unitarianism and feminism
- The Unitarian Radicals
- The Monthly Repository
- Unitarianism and Utilitarianism
- The Philosophic Radicals
- Joseph Priestley, LL.D. (1733-1804)
Bibliography
Bolam, C. Gordon, et al. The English Presbyterians, from Elizabethan Puritanism to Modern Unitarianism. 1968.
Gleadle, Kathryn. The Early Feminists. Radical Unitarians and the Emergence of the Women’s Rights Movement, 1831-51. London: MacMillan, 1998.
Holt, Raymond V. The Unitarian Contribution to Social Progress in England. Butler and Tanner, 1983.
Seed, John. “Theologies of Power: Unitarianism and the Social Relations of Religious Discourse, 1800-1850.” In R.J. Morris (ed.): Class, Power, and Social Structure in British Nineteenth Century Towns. Leicester: Leicester University Press, 1986. 108-56.
Stange, D.C. British Unitarians against Slavery, 1833-1865. Cranbury, New Jersey: Associated University Presses, 1984.
Stewart, W.A.C. Progressives and Radicals in English Education, 1750-1870. Macmillan, 1972.
Watts, Ruth E. “The Unitarian Contribution to the Development of Female Education, 1790-1850,” History of Education 9(4) 1980: 273-86.
"Unitarianism." The Columbia Encyclopedia: Sixth Edition. 2000.
Wilbur, Earl Morse. A History of Unitarianism, 2 vol. 1945.
Last modified 23 September 2020