Examples of Calvinism in the following topics:
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- Republican Calvin Coolidge benefited from a split within the
Democratic Party in winning the 1924 presidential election.
- The
United States presidential election of 1924 was won by Calvin Coolidge, the Republican candidate who served as vice president
under Warren G.
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- In the 1920 election, he and his running mate, Calvin Coolidge , defeated Democrat James M.
- In August 1923, President Harding died in office and was succeeded by Vice President Calvin Coolidge.
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- Harding and Vice President Calvin Coolidge, who became
president following Harding’s death in 1923, fostered the growth of U.S.
companies.
- President Calvin Coolidge did not advocate U.S. membership in the League of Nations.
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- Puritans adopted Calvinism with its opposition to ritual and an emphasis on preaching, a growing sabbatarianism, and preference for a Presbyterian system of church polity.
- Unlike the Puritans, the Quakers had more liberal views on gender equality and rejected the beliefs of Calvinism.
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- Rooted in the transcendental philosophy of Immanuel Kant (and of German Idealism more generally), it developed as a reaction against 18th century rationalism, John Locke's philosophy of Sensualism, and the manifest destiny of New England Calvinism.
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- Davis, who went on to
lose the general election to Republican Calvin Coolidge.
- Food Administration during World War I and then as
the United States Secretary of Commerce during the 1920s under Presidents Warren
Harding and Calvin Coolidge.
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- Puritans were followers of a Protestant minister named John Calvin.
- They followed John Calvin's idea that the covenant was between one person and God; everyone in the Puritan community was supposed to live a Christian life, and in exchange, God would bless everyone with health and wealth.
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- Three of her friends, Thomas Moss, Calvin McDowell, and Henry Stewart, owned the People's Grocery Company.
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- In 1928, under President Calvin Coolidge, the Clark Memorandum reversed the Roosevelt Corollary.
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- It appealed especially to opponents of Calvinism, a Protestant sect that believes the destiny of each individual is preordained by God.