Christian freedom, utopia and prince "Christian is totally free master without any influence ... Christian is a completely responsible servant without any influence." It shows Luther's reality. In Christian freedom, Luther believed that God's reconstruction was internal authority. In Utopia, Thomas Moore believes that power should belong to a group and other ordinary people in society should be as equal as communist society.
The utopia of Thomas Moore, the prince of Thomas Mor, the prince of Machiavelli, and the prince of Machiavelli are concerned about how society functions and maintains its fundamental problems. However, the goals behind the two pieces are very different. The purpose of the utopia is to demonstrate the maintenance of an "ideal" society, the purpose of the prince is to guide the prince and ruler about how to maintain his country. On the surface, these two goals seem to be similar, but the difference lies in the way the author deals with the subject of power.
After Machiavelli's prince, more people began making utopia in the early 16th century. Although Moles' work is seen as political irony, he still spreads as much information as the Prince is. According to the focus of Morse's work and utopia, resources, management and entertainment seems to be the fundamental European problem at the time. I insist that these questions are conditional, but is America a contemporary feudal society? In 1516, Sir Thomas More was also first published as a patron saint of the attorney's book Utopian. In Utopia, two or more novels discuss his European power politics at that time. It functions as a political discourse by a fictitious person, Rafael Haisley. . As Hythloday's role is used as a mouthpiece, Thomas Moore can critically discuss UK politics, the Catholic church
In the opening ceremony of the movie 'A Man for All Seasons', the utopia was quoted in the conversation. The so-called unethical behavior of the English pastor is compared with the more fundamental behavior of fictional priests of Moore's utopia. Open Utopia 2012 full translation version (including all letters and recognition included in the first 4 prints of 1516-18, including side bet). It is licensed as BY-SA Creative Commons and has been published in multiple formats (HTML, PDF, TXT, ODF, EPUB, social book).