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Summarizing the American experience up to the 1830's Democracy in
America explores why the republican government of the United States
was succeeding when similar undertakings had failed elsewhere.
Based on first hand observations, and balancing the positive and
negative attributes of American culture, Alexis de Tocqueville
provides a seminal analysis of the economic, political, cultural,
and religious components that led to the resounding success of the
young United States of America.
These essential documents, formulated over the course of twenty
years, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of
Confederation, the Constitution, the Federalist Papers, and
President Washington's Farewell Address, encapsulate a period of
crucial significance to the United States and the world. They are
the embodied results of centuries of thought, debate, and
experimentation - finally espoused in a practical fashion. The
foundations for the experiment of liberty and law that is the
United States of America, they are the fundamental guide for
securing the blessings of liberty.
Born over a century apart, one into poverty and the other into
slavery, Benjamin Franklin and Frederick Douglass embody the
American ideals of success through hard work, vision, and freedom.
At the end of their lives, both men were renowned statesmen,
admired all over the world. Each is a vivid example of the endless
possibilities available to free people.
The Wealth of Nations was the world's introduction to capitalism
and economics in the modern sense. Smith developed the ideas of
free trade and enlightened self interest as in ultimately bringing
prosperity and forming a more just society. Freedom, labor, and
responsibility form a foundation for the development and
accumulation of wealth.
Freedom can lead to liberty, or it can descend into chaos.
Rousseau's The Social Contract, Paine's Common Sense, and Burke's
Reflections on the Revolution in France encompass the ideas,
progress, and results of reform and revolutionary change. Rousseau
reasoned that people are born free and act as a collective
sovereign - owing both freedom and duty under the auspices of the
general will, embodied in government. Paine wrote Common Sense in
the seminal year of 1775. Using a reasoned and accessible style, he
brought forth numerous arguments to demonstrate the logic of
launching an American Revolution. Burke's Reflections, while
specifically aimed at the French Revolution, demonstrate the
superiority of practical solutions over abstract concepts. Each of
these works prominently displays the importance of changes leading
to freedom. These works demarcate a firm delineation between
constructive and destructive change and how it affects human
freedom.
The profound wisdom of Barak Obama is not something for
verification, substantiation, corroboration, or even
categorization. Rather, Obama's wisdom lies in the vacuity of his
reflections on his diverse background, his great achievements, and
the world around him. His received insight expresses itself in a
variety of manifestations in his roles as leader, president, and
teacher. This book in your hands represents this sage wisdom and
counsel organized in a manner that all can understand, and with a
precision that is unmatched. Moreover, our special study system
will allow you to document and journal the growing and future
insights of this transformational leader. Start now, and be
transformed
The result of over twenty years of research The Spirit of the Laws
encompasses a vast array of topics and issues. This groundbreaking
work provides a comprehensive examination of some of the most
important topics relating to liberty. These include
constitutionalism, the separation of powers, the primacy of civil
liberty and the rule of law, and the power of the local community
in establishing political institut
Written in 1689, Locke's Two Treatises of Government disputes the
logic of the "divine right of kings," and proceeds to develop a
theory of society base on the ideas of natural rights and the
social contract. Locke acknowledged the necessity of the state, but
saw it primarily as a tool to promote the protection of people and
property, as well as for the restraint of violence. Based on the
consent of the governed, Locke's conception of government
highlights the importance of accountability between government and
citizen. This special edition also includes the text of the Magna
Charta - one of the foundations of English law, Locke's Letter
Concerning Toleration, and The Reasonableness of Christianity.
The Law of Nations focuses on the rights and obligations of what we
now term international relations. Outlining ideas that nations
should develop reciprocal respect, this work was influential during
the founding era of the United States.
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Paperback
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 640
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