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In analyzing the debates between the Federalists and the
Antifederalists, McWilliams, Gibbons, and their contributors break
sharply with those who interpret the founding of America as either
the work of pure pragmatists or as the institutionalization of
class interests. This study of the very nature of modern
representative democracy explains past and present dilemmas and
contradictions in terms of differing Federalist and Antifederalist
views. Students and scholars interested in political theory and
American government and history will find this discussion of our
political traditions a fascinating one that provokes thought about
possible opportunities for political renewal and democratic change.
This examination of the political theory of the American founding
deals with often-opposing beliefs about pluralist interests and
political compromise, human nature, what constitutes the public
good and the public sphere, the relationship between polity and
economy, the role of religion in politics, and our political
tradition in general. The study presents different points of view
held by America's founders and considers other interpretations and
ideas of Machiavelli, Spinoza, Hobbes, Montesquieu, James Wilson,
and Woodrow Wilson, among others.
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