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    When our founding Fathers created America‚ they intended for it to be a country full of diversity and equal opportunities. In Rights of Man (1791) by Thomas Paine‚ a popular pamphleteer in the late 1700s‚ Paine characterized America as a “union” of a diverse people with no extra privileges for the rich and a “just government”. Paine’s characterization still holds partially true today‚ because America is a diverse nation filled with different nationalities and religions; however‚ his claims that all

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    The founding father generation of 1789 established a new government under the constitution. Interpreting the constitution soon became the debate in the world of politics. Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson both had distinguished point of views during George Washington’s presidency. As a result‚ a the two party system emerged‚ consisting of the Federalists‚ Hamilton‚ and the Democratic-Republicans‚ Jefferson and James Madison. However‚ to some extent‚ president Jefferson and Madison expressed

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    2012 Thomas Hobbes and John Locke are two of the most influential political philosophers of the modern age. Their ideas on political philosophy‚ among other ideas‚ have helped shaped the Western World‚ as we know it. One of the most important theories that the two have both discussed‚ and written in detail on‚ is the idea of the social contract. Social Contract Theory is the view that moral and/or political duties depend on a contract that leads to the formation of a civil society. Thomas Hobbes

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    wanted without control of outside countries. But without the encouragement of writers to help us in our time of need‚ things still would not have been that easy. Some of the great writers that influenced others to make history happen would be Thomas Paine‚ Thomas Jefferson‚ and Patrick Henry. These men wrote articles that encouraged others to stand up for what they believed in‚ and they wrote remarkable speeches that helped us become who we are. They had the courage to write their thoughts into writing

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    Long before Thomas Jefferson was the third President of the United States of America‚ the Virginian developed a unique passion for food and wine. Upon his arrival to the soon-to-be United States he found dull colonial cuisine‚ unappetizing . The common fare was far from elegant and rather boring. Even high society was not accustomed to the elegant meals from accomplished and worldly chefs. Meals typically consisted of boiled‚ roasted‚ baked‚ or stewed meats‚ served with poorly cooked‚ overly salted

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    Unit 2 Paper: A Modern Day Sir Thomas More After reading Utopia‚ I realized problems in today’s society itself. Hythloday compared and contrasted concepts of government between Utopia and European countries all throughout the book. The perfect Utopian society included all‚ but not limited to: rational thought‚ communal property‚ no love of gold‚ no class distinction‚ little to no crime‚ no poverty‚ religious tolerance‚ and little inclination to war. Many of these concepts are completely

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    In Leviathan‚ Thomas Hobbes argues that all humans are by nature untrustworthy‚ motivated only by self-serving factors—namely fear of death and glory—and will therefore seek to harm others when possible to elicit safety or greater relative gain—as besting another in competition for some resource is a source of glory—for themselves (Hobbes‚ 559-560‚ 565). It follows‚ then‚ that since all humans are flawed by nature in these respects‚ no one man or woman could hold a greater claim to power over another—as

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    central government that his opposing Federalist party wanted. His beliefs on a frugal and limited government‚ reduced army and navy‚ and the repeal of taxes were all issues that helped maintain his philosophy of government as well as alter it. One way Thomas Jefferson was able to keep his beliefs in tact was by the repealing of the excise tax. Jefferson’s view on the excise tax of whiskey (Doc A) was that it was an infernal one and will break apart the Union. This excise tax

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    Hobbes and Locke Philosophy is something that is hard to give the definition; it can be seen as a value‚ a way people trying to make sense to the material world‚ a tool people use to explain incidents. Thomas Hobbes and John Locke are both English philosophers‚ they have a huge influence in poetical philosophy‚ both of them have discussed terms ‘state of nature’ and ‘contracts’; which could be seen as a term people use when discussing power‚ state‚ law‚ rights and obey. Hobbes and Locke both

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    The perception that Federalists were loose constructionists and that Jeffersonian Republicans were very strict constructionists was very well founded‚ but not accurate 100% of the time. The presidency of Thomas Jefferson mainly supported the theory that the Jeffersonian Republicans were strict constructionists. James Madison’s presidency supported that theory as well. Both presidents‚ however‚ made exceptions to their general policies when an issue was just too big to fit inside the tiny box of their

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