Constitutionalism and Liberty: Essays in Honor of David K. Nichols
Editat de Anthony D. Bartl, Jordan T. Cash Contribuţii de J. David Alvis, Christopher Bissex, Jacob Boros, Matthew Brogdon, Kevin J. Burns, Timothy W. Burns, Adam M. Carrington, Jerome C. Foss, Joseph K. Griffith, Benjamin Kleinerman, Jeffrey J. Poelvoorde, Matthew K. Reising, Mark Scully, Benjamin Slomski, Lee Ward, Michael Zuckerten Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 ian 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781666947090
ISBN-10: 1666947091
Pagini: 358
Dimensiuni: 160 x 232 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1666947091
Pagini: 358
Dimensiuni: 160 x 232 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Gouverneur Morris on the Mixed Regime and Separation of Powers
John Adams and the Defining of the Federalist Presidency
The Compromise of 1850: The Senate's Triumvirate on the Price of Union
Ronald Reagan as New Deal Conservative
President Obama and the Jeffersonian Tradition of Executive Power
Executive Privileges
American Political Development and Ideational Institutionalism
Power Struggle: Locke and Montesquieu on Judicial Power
Modern Administration and the Integrity of the Article III Judicial Power
The Myth of the Modern Judiciary
"Tender and Sacred Ties": The Abolitionist Defense of Parental Rights and the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments
The Flag and the American Constellation
James Madison's Memorial and Remonstrance and the First Amendment
Thomas Jefferson on Higher Education
Leo Strauss on the Significance of the Mutability of "Natural Right"
Macbeth and Christian Rule
Michelangelo's David and the Florentine Republic
John Adams and the Defining of the Federalist Presidency
The Compromise of 1850: The Senate's Triumvirate on the Price of Union
Ronald Reagan as New Deal Conservative
President Obama and the Jeffersonian Tradition of Executive Power
Executive Privileges
American Political Development and Ideational Institutionalism
Power Struggle: Locke and Montesquieu on Judicial Power
Modern Administration and the Integrity of the Article III Judicial Power
The Myth of the Modern Judiciary
"Tender and Sacred Ties": The Abolitionist Defense of Parental Rights and the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments
The Flag and the American Constellation
James Madison's Memorial and Remonstrance and the First Amendment
Thomas Jefferson on Higher Education
Leo Strauss on the Significance of the Mutability of "Natural Right"
Macbeth and Christian Rule
Michelangelo's David and the Florentine Republic
Recenzii
No one acquainted with the scholarship and pedagogy of David Nichols would expect anything other than excellence from the students and colleagues who have benefited from his friendship, guidance, and instruction. Even with those high expectations, however, the essays in this volume are enormously impressive in their insight, their fluency, and their unrivaled command of political philosophy, American political thought, and American constitutional studies. They form a worthy tribute to an inspiring figure and steadfast friend.
This collection of essays in honor of David Nichols, assembled by distinguished scholars from many different institutions, is a fitting tribute to Professor Nichols's legacy, and an excellent volume in its own right. Just as Professor Nichols's work spanned many different subjects and informed our thinking on all of them, these essays cover diverse topics with care and precision. Scholars of political theory, American political institutions, constitutional law, and politics and literature will find interesting and novel insights in these pages.
In the breadth of their coverage and the richness of their insights, these excellent essays are a fitting tribute to the teaching and scholarly career of David Nichols. Like the lifelong contribution of the authors' teacher, colleague, and friend, they enrich our understanding of the foundations and development of, what Lincoln called, 'the last best hope of earth.'
This artfully arranged collection of erudite and penetrating essays is a fitting tribute to the work of the great scholar and teacher to whom it is dedicated: David K. Nichols. More than that, it is essential reading for anyone seriously interested in the institutional, cultural, moral, and philosophical conditions necessary for the perpetuation of the American experiment in the politics of ordered liberty.
This collection of essays in honor of David Nichols, assembled by distinguished scholars from many different institutions, is a fitting tribute to Professor Nichols's legacy, and an excellent volume in its own right. Just as Professor Nichols's work spanned many different subjects and informed our thinking on all of them, these essays cover diverse topics with care and precision. Scholars of political theory, American political institutions, constitutional law, and politics and literature will find interesting and novel insights in these pages.
In the breadth of their coverage and the richness of their insights, these excellent essays are a fitting tribute to the teaching and scholarly career of David Nichols. Like the lifelong contribution of the authors' teacher, colleague, and friend, they enrich our understanding of the foundations and development of, what Lincoln called, 'the last best hope of earth.'
This artfully arranged collection of erudite and penetrating essays is a fitting tribute to the work of the great scholar and teacher to whom it is dedicated: David K. Nichols. More than that, it is essential reading for anyone seriously interested in the institutional, cultural, moral, and philosophical conditions necessary for the perpetuation of the American experiment in the politics of ordered liberty.