“There was in Puritanism an element which was conservative and traditionalist, and an element which was revolutionary; a collectivism which grasped at an iron discipline, and an individualism which spurned the savorless mess of human ordinances; a sober prudence which would garner the fruits of this world, and a divine recklessness which would make all things new.”

—  R. H. Tawney

Part IV, Ch. 2
Religion and the Rise of Capitalism (1926)

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R. H. Tawney 34
English philosopher 1880–1962

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