His name was Thomas Paine.
For any good plan to work, it must include common sense.
Frank Joseph has written: 'Common-sense view of true religion' -- subject(s): African American missionaries, Biography, Church work with prisoners
you can make it by your own ! common sense !
prostitucion
Geometry has been studied in every civilization that we have written records of. In that sense, no mathematician can have created geometry. Euclid is generally recognized as having pioneered the use of the axiomatic method in mathematics. Of that work, his most famous is his work in geometry.
Peter Pan
I think probably Dante's Divine Comedy might be the most famous written work of the Middle Ages. Another possibility could be Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
Common Sense was written in very plain language that even semiliterate men could understand. Chalmer's work, on the other hand, was too complex. Those who needed convincing to remain loyal to Britain were not the educated who could actually understand Plain Truth, many of which were already loyalists, but the uneducated common folk who would have no hope of understanding it who were already swayed by Paine's simple work.
seriously?? ovibously not use your common sense
It was written about in Cervantes' work: Don Quixote.
Richard Cavalier has written: 'Common Sense ISD' 'Sales Meetings That Work' -- subject(s): Sales meetings 'Practical Word Power' -- subject(s): ESL, simplified phonetics, volunteer tutoring, giving-back
King George III was not referred to as "common sense"; rather, the term "Common Sense" refers to a pamphlet written by Thomas Paine in 1776. This influential work argued for American independence from British rule and criticized monarchy, including King George III's reign. Paine's writing resonated with the American colonists' desire for self-governance and played a significant role in shaping public opinion during the Revolutionary War.