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The Role Of Religion In Part II Of Benjamin Franklin's The Autobiography

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Part II of The Autobiography, by Benjamin Franklin, reveals Franklin’s pragmatic outlook on religion. He specifically focuses on “Moral Perfection,” and intentionally avoids discussion of specific religious groups. Franklin’s intent appears to address morality and values regardless of religious affiliation. “I never doubted, for instance, the Existence of the Deity, that he made the World, and govern’d it by his Providence,” (Franklin 533) Franklin states of his unquestionable belief in God. Although Franklin believed in God, he avoided traditional organized religion; “I early absented myself from the Public Assemblies of the Sect” (Franklin 533). For Franklin religion was a personal matter that must be separated from moral issues of society

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