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    Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence and Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMMzY1KJVeo]‚ for each of these documents is a solid‚ memorable piece in style and historical support. Both pieces begin with many similar key factors‚ establishing affinity between the speaker and his audience on the concrete basis of a common background. Jefferson does not say "I hold these truths..." or "the government" or even "you‚ the public" when beginning his famous declaration. The first

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    drafting of the Declaration of Independence. Serving in the Virginia House of Burgesses and Continental Congress‚ the Founding Fathers found Jefferson to be qualified for the position. On July 4th‚ 1776‚ the draft was sent to King George III to officially declare independence from the English Crown. Thomas Jefferson wrote this clear and persuasive argument for the United States to break away from England using persuasive appeals and stylistic devices. Throughout the Declaration‚ methods of persuasion

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    During the 18th Century‚ the colonists gradually became fed up with the poor treatment that they were subject to from Britain. When the colonies finally wrote the Declaration of Independence in 1776 as a method of rebellion‚ they put the blame for everything they had problems with on King George III. However‚ the “repeated injuries and usurpations” were the fault of Parliament‚ not King George III. Their claim that blamed him was for a large part invalid. Although the colonists were excessively

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    The Declaration of Independence was a turning point for America’s sense of identity‚however the French and Indian War was even more instrumental to the formation of America’s Identity. The war led to the first attempt at an organized government‚ it started to unify the colonies and contributed to the rowing feeling that self-government was necessary. The growing tension with the Native Americans and the foreign French led the British to call colonial representatives for a meeting in Albany‚ New

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    In the late 1700’s‚ ideas of the Enlightenment began to come into affect. In North America‚ the American government started to form after two famous documents were finished‚ The Declaration of Independence and The Constitution of the United States. The Political and Social ideas of Rousseau and Baccaria from the Enlightenment are replicated in the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution. The Declaration was used to declare independence‚ and the Constitution was written to limit the

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    "The Declaration of Independence provides three unalienable rights: life‚ liberty‚ and the pursuit of happiness. Out of these three‚ the pursuit of happiness is definitely the most important to me. If one does not understand the pursuit of happiness‚ they simply won’t be able to live life to the fullest. Completing every single task requires the pursuit of happiness‚ because if one is miserable while performing a task‚ it will only make it worse. Everyone might as well do everything with a smile

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    philosopher‚ Immanuel Kant described the Enlightenment as the: “man’s emergence from his self-imposed nonage. Nonage is the inability to use one’s own understanding without another’s guidance. This nonage is self-imposed if its cause lies not in lack of understanding‚ but in indecision and lack of courage to use one’s own mind without another’s guidance. Dare to know! (Sapere aude.) ‘Have the courage to use your own understanding‚’ is therefore the motto of the Enlightenment” (Kant). Meanwhile‚ past periods

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    Margarita Arnold HIS 112-100M Critical Essay #1 The three fundamental principles of the Enlightenment listed in the text of Traditions and Encounters are popular sovereignty‚ individual freedom‚ and political and legal equality. According to Gombrich‚ the author of the A Little History of the World‚ the three fundamental principles of the Enlightenment are tolerance‚ reason‚ and humanity. Traditions and Encounters describes popular sovereignty as a “contract between the rulers and the ruled”

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    John Locke and Isaac Newton were the major intellectual forerunners of the Enlightenment. Print culture was a culture in which books‚ journals‚ newspapers‚ and pamphlets had achieved a status of their own. The Enlightenment flourished in this. The most influential philosophe was Voltaire. He wrote Letters on the English. The book praised the virtues of the English‚ especially their religious liberty‚ and criticized the abuses of French society. Voltaire said Muhammad and Islam represented simply

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    The Declaration Questions The Declaration- By Gemma Malley Chapter 1 1. Anna is at Grange Hall because she is a surplus. 2. A surplus is an excess of production or supply. A surplus is more than what is needed or used. Anna is referred to as a surplus because she is not meant to be there and is more than what the people need. Anna is just part of the excess of people. 3. A Valuable Asset is someone who is an extremely useful person. A Valuable Asset is there to clean‚ cook and do all

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