Vox Populi was a virtual representation of one of Jacob Frye and Evie Frye's genetic memories, relived by a Helix initiate through the Helix Navigator. Jacob or Evie spoke with Karl Marx, who asked for their protection while he gave a speech. Sep 19, 2016 Explore releases from Vox Populi! Shop for Vinyl, CDs and more from Vox Populi! At the Discogs Marketplace.
Did You Know?Vox populi is a Latin phrase that literally translates as 'the voice of the people.' It can be found in the longer maxim, 'Vox populi, vox Dei,' which means 'The voice of the people is the voice of God.' Many people think that expression means that the people are always right, but it really implies that the will of the masses - right or wrong - is often irresistible. Since the mid-1960s, English speakers, especially British ones, have trimmed 'vox populi' down to the abbreviated form 'vox pop,' an expression used particularly for popular opinion as it is used and expressed by the media.
For more general uses, see.Vox Populi, Vox Dei (Latin, 'the voice of the people is the voice of God') was used as the title of a tract of 1709, which was expanded in 1710 and later reprintings as The Judgment of whole Kingdoms and Nations. The author is unknown but was probably either or Thomas Harrison. Enlightenment Prelate:, 1676-1761, 2004, p.90. 'Hoadly's assize sermons had a strong influence, and provided the foundation for Whigs like Thomas Harrison, the probable author of the 1709 tract Vox Populi Vox Dei: or True Maxims of Government, which was reprinted eight times in the first.' Revolution Principles: The Politics of Party 1689-1720, 1990, p.209.
'The author of Vox Populi Vox Dei is unknown. Some nineteenth-century bibliographers gave the honour to Somers, others to Defoe, but neither attribution is very plausible.It was signed 'R. , and there seems no reason to challenge the accepted attribution to Robert Ferguson. But long before 1709 Ferguson had turned Jacobite, and it is unlikely that he turned back. As for Political Aphorisms, this was signed.Thomas Harrison'. Law and Judicial Duty, 2009, Page 74.
'At the meeting of this high court early in 1327, Archbishop of Canterbury Walter Reynolds brought charges against the king. Homage to the prince, and Archbishop Reynolds — the son of a baker — preached on the text Vox populi, vox Dei.
David Lagomarsino, Charles T. The Trial of Charles I: A Documentary History, 2000. 'As far back as 1327, in pronouncing the deposition of Edward II, the Archbishop of Canterbury Walter Reynolds had taken as his justifying text the old Carolingian adage Vox populi, vox Dei, “The voice of the people is the voice of God.'
. Whitmore and Fenn. An Alphabetical catalogue of an extensive collection of the extensive writings of Daniel Defoe, 1829, p.23. 'Vox Populi, Vox Dei: being true Maxims of Government, proving — That all, Kings, Governours, and Forms of Government.' Was afterwards published under the title of ' The Judgment of whole Kingdoms,., with considerable alterations.'
Spotlight at Stanford. Retrieved October 5, 2019. Netta Murray Goldsmith. Alexander Pope: the evolution of a poet, 2002, p.102.
'Until the 1750s men were flogged and imprisoned if convicted of spreading propaganda in support of the Stuart cause, while in 1719, a young printer John Matthews, who published a Jacobite pamphlet, Vox Populi, Vox Dei, was hanged. In these circumstances Jacobites learned to write.
'. Kathleen Wilson. The Sense of the People: Politics, Culture and Imperialism, 1998, p.115.
'The pamphlet Vox Populi, Vox Dei was perhaps the most notorious instance of this tactic, borrowing its title from a radical Whig tract of 1709 to argue that by the Whigs' own principles of.' This article about a book on is a. You can help Wikipedia.