American Democracy: American Founders, Presidents, and Enlightened Philosophers
Editat de Justin P. DePlato Cu Kyle Hodgeen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 sep 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781498503242
ISBN-10: 1498503241
Pagini: 666
Ilustrații: 2 Tables
Dimensiuni: 151 x 229 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1498503241
Pagini: 666
Ilustrații: 2 Tables
Dimensiuni: 151 x 229 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Part One: From Greece to Rome
Plato - The Republic: Book VIIIAristotle - Politics: Book IMarcus Tullius Cicero - On the Laws
Part Two: Enlightenment
Hugo Grotius - On the Law of War and Peace: Book I, Chapter I; Book II Chapters I and IIThomas Hobbes - Leviathan: Book I, Chapters 15-20John Locke - Second Treatise of Civil Government: Chapters 1-15Montesquieu - The Spirit of the Laws: Book XIJean-Jacques Rousseau - The Social Contract: Books I and II
Part Three: The American Project
John Winthrop - A Model of Christian CharityWilliam Tennent Thomas Paine - Common SensePatrick Henry - "Give me Liberty or Give me Death!"Benjamin Franklin - Address to the Federal ConventionRobert Morris Elbridge Gerry - Anti-Federalist Paper #7George Clinton - Anti-Federalist Paper #69Benjamin Rush - An Address to the Inhabitants of the British Settlements in America Upon Slave-KeepingEdmund Randolph - The Virginia PlanJohn Adams - Thoughts on GovernmentAlexander Hamilton - Federalist Papers #70 and 78Thomas Jefferson - The Tree of LibertyJames Madison - Federalist Papers #10 and 51John C. Calhoun - South Carolina Exposition and ProtestFrances Wright - Speech at New Harmony Hall
Part Four: American Presidents
George Washington - Farewell AddressAndrew Jackson - National Bank VetoJames K. Polk - 1st Inaugural AddressMillard Fillmore - First Annual MessageAbraham Lincoln - 1st and 2nd Inaugural AddressWilliam McKinley - 2nd Inaugural AddressTheodore Roosevelt - 1st Inaugural AddressWoodrow Wilson - 1st Inaugural AddressCalvin Coolidge - 1st Inaugural AddressHerbert Hoover - 1st Inaugural AddressFranklin Delano Roosevelt - 1st and 2nd Inaugural AddressJohn F. Kennedy - 1st Inaugural AddressRichard Nixon - 1st Inaugural AddressRonald Reagan - 1st Inaugural Address
Plato - The Republic: Book VIIIAristotle - Politics: Book IMarcus Tullius Cicero - On the Laws
Part Two: Enlightenment
Hugo Grotius - On the Law of War and Peace: Book I, Chapter I; Book II Chapters I and IIThomas Hobbes - Leviathan: Book I, Chapters 15-20John Locke - Second Treatise of Civil Government: Chapters 1-15Montesquieu - The Spirit of the Laws: Book XIJean-Jacques Rousseau - The Social Contract: Books I and II
Part Three: The American Project
John Winthrop - A Model of Christian CharityWilliam Tennent Thomas Paine - Common SensePatrick Henry - "Give me Liberty or Give me Death!"Benjamin Franklin - Address to the Federal ConventionRobert Morris Elbridge Gerry - Anti-Federalist Paper #7George Clinton - Anti-Federalist Paper #69Benjamin Rush - An Address to the Inhabitants of the British Settlements in America Upon Slave-KeepingEdmund Randolph - The Virginia PlanJohn Adams - Thoughts on GovernmentAlexander Hamilton - Federalist Papers #70 and 78Thomas Jefferson - The Tree of LibertyJames Madison - Federalist Papers #10 and 51John C. Calhoun - South Carolina Exposition and ProtestFrances Wright - Speech at New Harmony Hall
Part Four: American Presidents
George Washington - Farewell AddressAndrew Jackson - National Bank VetoJames K. Polk - 1st Inaugural AddressMillard Fillmore - First Annual MessageAbraham Lincoln - 1st and 2nd Inaugural AddressWilliam McKinley - 2nd Inaugural AddressTheodore Roosevelt - 1st Inaugural AddressWoodrow Wilson - 1st Inaugural AddressCalvin Coolidge - 1st Inaugural AddressHerbert Hoover - 1st Inaugural AddressFranklin Delano Roosevelt - 1st and 2nd Inaugural AddressJohn F. Kennedy - 1st Inaugural AddressRichard Nixon - 1st Inaugural AddressRonald Reagan - 1st Inaugural Address
Recenzii
DePlato and Hodge's reader on the philosophical origins of American democracy is a welcome addition to the literature. It will be a valuable companion to monographs on American political philosophy and politics. The book includes a thematic analysis of, as well as excerpts from, philosophers and the American founders - writers such as the Ancient Greeks, Plato and Aristotle, Roman scribes such as Cicero, the contract theorists such as Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau, and the Founders of the newly independent American Democratic project such as Washington, Paine, Franklin, Gerry, Jefferson, and John Adams, plus 14 American presidents from Washington to Reagan. This means that readers will be forced to interpret the significance of each historical figure to the founding of the country. The book raises the provocative question: if modern-day Americans knew nothing about the foundational principles of the country, does it matter? The answer clearly leads to the affirmative. For example, how do we explain the fact that in the aftermath of the American Revolution, English Colonials in America choose democracy instead of copying the British Empire that gave birth to the colony? In other words, the book convincingly shows any serious reader that the American democracy was truly an exceptional historical event.
It would be hard to fault the selections of Grotius, Hobbes, Locke, Montequieu, and Rosseau. The editors' comments and linkages to the historical context are well done.... The American Project section is sound and the primary source selections judiciously chosen.... In sum, DePlato and Hodge offer a sourcebook that instructors may adapt to a variety of intellectual perspectives... [T]hey provide ample opportunity for instructors and students to engage in a dialogue over the intellectual influences on the American Founding and its application by subsequent statesmen.
History has shown that many governments operate as a practical matter, exerting power and legitimizing themselves according to one or another schema. Governments enacted according to philosophical principles have more often than not proven ineffectual (i.e. the great socialist states of the previous few decades). One nation-the United States of America-has survived as a practical power, coming to dominate the international scene in recent history, but rests on philosophical principles. American Democracy reveals the philosophical traditions that support the American republic and provides historical clues as to why it may continue to do so-in some form-for a long time to come.
It would be hard to fault the selections of Grotius, Hobbes, Locke, Montequieu, and Rosseau. The editors' comments and linkages to the historical context are well done.... The American Project section is sound and the primary source selections judiciously chosen.... In sum, DePlato and Hodge offer a sourcebook that instructors may adapt to a variety of intellectual perspectives... [T]hey provide ample opportunity for instructors and students to engage in a dialogue over the intellectual influences on the American Founding and its application by subsequent statesmen.
History has shown that many governments operate as a practical matter, exerting power and legitimizing themselves according to one or another schema. Governments enacted according to philosophical principles have more often than not proven ineffectual (i.e. the great socialist states of the previous few decades). One nation-the United States of America-has survived as a practical power, coming to dominate the international scene in recent history, but rests on philosophical principles. American Democracy reveals the philosophical traditions that support the American republic and provides historical clues as to why it may continue to do so-in some form-for a long time to come.