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    Positive Impact of Civil Disobedience One way through which the society is impacted is civil disobedience. This act of opposing a law that one consider unjust can either positively or negatively impact a free society. Since the liberalization of most regions and country in the world‚ civil disobedience has been a key weapon in showing displeasure of unjust laws and it is remarkable that it has achieved more than it has destroyed. To a large extent‚ it is through civil disobedience that the two greatest

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    distaste in the law of the government through civil disobedience. However‚ it is very controversial about whether or not causing civil disobedience leads to a negative or positive influence on society. Civil disobedience has given society many positive influences. Much of history has seen good come from civil disobedience like Martin Luther King Jr.’s civil rights movements‚ Martin Luther’s 95 theses in 1517‚ the American Revolution‚ and so on. Many civil disobedient events in history shaped how today’s

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    differences. The laws are something we cannot change or give opinion on. It is what t is‚ but society needs peaceful resistances to laws to positively impact society. We cant impact our society with the negatives. Negatives such as breaking the law‚ civil disobedience‚ and threats of the law. We have to be remembered for the good resistance that we have. In January 12th‚ 1964 it has been published by Charles Frankel is it right to break the law? The law is something everyone has to obey. As you know‚

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    “It is not always the same thing to be a good man and a good citizen” (Aristotle‚ Nicomachean Ethics). Although civil disobedience may cause divisive rhetoric and chaos‚ nonviolent resistance positively impacts a free society by providing an impetus for progress and starting a dialogue about injustice. Our nation was founded on principles of civil disobedience. In Federalist #51‚ James Madison proclaimed‚ “If angels were to govern men‚ neither external nor internal controls on government would

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    Impact of Civil Disobedience In today’s society there are countless laws that people will say they oppose‚ usually because they feel it infringes upon their rights. One of the ways these people can oppose them is through civil disobedience. This is the peaceful refusal of certain laws that one considers unjust‚ while still accepting the punishment for breaking the law. There is debate of how this civil disobedience affects society‚ whether it be in a positive or negative way. I believe that civil disobedience

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    What form of civil disobedience would work best against a nation that functioned under a social contract that make racism‚ sexism classism‚ and ageism legal? I believe the best form of civil disobedience that would against this type of social contract would be egoism. With this form of civil disobedience anyone would do what he or she feels is best for them‚ and in the end they will find what is best for them is what is best for all. The two other options for civil disobedience Subjectivism and Cultural

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    In the Seven Guidelines for Civil Disobedience‚ Howard Zinn presents civil disobedience as an act of deliberately violating a law for a societal purpose (Zinn 1). Therefore‚ civil disobedience is completely justified when society is threatened by a regime that practices absolute sovereignty. It is justified because absolute sovereignty only serves the interests of the state‚ not ours. Zinn perfectly uncovers the agenda of absolute sovereignty by stating: “We must never forget that we and the state

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    Civil disobedience‚ positively impacts a free society. Take Martin Luther King‚ for example‚ him and many other activists fought for civil rights. His whole fight was non-violent. He would travel around states preaching about equal rights. He was ganged up on numerous times‚ but never did he start it. There were simply laws such as: African Americans couldn’t vote‚ or purchase land on top of there was still slavery present in the United Sates‚ that King and others didn’t agree with and wanted to

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    The experiment found that two-thirds of the people continued to the highest level of 450 volts (Mcleod‚ “Milgram”). The rest of the people still obeyed the orders of the authority‚ just to a lesser level. Apparent from the Stanley-Milgram Experiment‚ “People tend to obey orders from other people if they recognize their authority as morally right and/or legally based. This response to legitimate authority is learned in a variety of situations‚ for example in the family‚ school‚ and workplace” (Mcleod

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    Walden Summer Assignment Background: 1. Henry David Thoreau was many things‚ but the most important were him being a philosopher‚ a naturalist‚ abolitionist‚ and a poet. He was born in Concord Massachusetts‚ into a modest family with his two older siblings Helen and John Jr. as well as his younger sister Sophia. He went to Harvard College in 1833 to 1837. He took courses in philosophy mathematics‚ and science. He wasn’t satisfied with the traditional professions for college graduates so he

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