
audiobook
HERESY: ITS UTILITY AND MORALITY - A PLEA AND A JUSTIFICATION
By Charles Bradlaugh
London: Austin & Co., 17, Johnson's Court, Fleet Street, E.C. Price Ninepence.
HERESY: ITS MORALITY & UTILITY - A PLEA and A JUSTIFICATION.
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER II. THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY
CHAPTER III. THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
CHAPTER IV. THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
The work opens by asking why societies punish dissenting thinkers while tolerating many other moral failings. It argues that heresy is not a creed of atheism or a simple rebellion, but a deliberate selection of ideas arrived at through independent reasoning. By contrasting the inherited habits of orthodoxy with the active inquiry of the heretic, the author frames dissent as a necessary engine of intellectual growth.
Drawing on figures such as Bacon, Newton, Voltaire and contemporary revolutionaries, the essay shows how once‑labeled heretics later become pillars of enlightenment and political liberty. It contends that genuine progress—scientific, religious, or civic—always begins with a minority willing to question entrenched doctrines, and that education is the true companion of constructive heresy. In the light of nineteenth‑century advances like cheap print and public lectures, the writer urges listeners to view dissent as a respectable, even heroic, pursuit of truth.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (148K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2011-05-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1833–1891
A fiery Victorian reformer, freethinker, and parliamentarian, this outspoken voice fought for free speech, secularism, and the right to affirm rather than swear a religious oath in Parliament. His life sits at the crossroads of radical politics, public debate, and the struggle for civil liberties in 19th-century Britain.
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