Forward To Freedom

Forward To Freedom
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The American Constitution and Humanity's Struggle for Liberty Across the Ages
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Artikel-Nr:
9780996026307
Veröffentl:
2019
Seiten:
222
Autor:
Jerry Combee
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
Reflowable
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Forward To Freedom - The American Constitution and Humanity’s Struggle for Liberty Across the Ages is a fast-paced, informative, and inspiring account of the Constitution and its historical roots. It should be a must-read for all citizens of the United States, those aspiring to become its citizens, and others seeking to understand “government by the people.” 
The daily news is filled with references to separation of powers, checks and balances, federalism, judicial review, and other constitutional principles. All these require comprehension of the Constitution if “we the people” are to hold our leaders accountable to rule within constitutional bounds. Forward To Freedom provides us such comprehension.
The Framers of the Constitution deeply believed that the hand of Divine Providence is at work in history. They well knew the exciting story of humanity’s struggle for liberty across the ages and viewed the Constitution as a culminating moment in that struggle and one in which God played a role.
As the Framers knew, six thousand or more years ago the earliest civilizations of the Middle East crushed freedom in the name of divine right of one man to rule. Ancient Israel, which experienced several hundred years of republican government, proved the only exception. Freedom made some progress in Classical Greece and Rome, and the Framers learned from the Greek and Roman political philosophers. But Greece’s efforts to build a stable democracy and Rome’s attempt to remain a republic both ultimately failed.
The Framers thoroughly understood how limited government slowly developed in England during centuries of effort to limit kings. Final victory for freedom came with the Glorious Revolution of 1688 when consent of the governed henceforth became the basis of English government. At that time, English philosopher John Locke articulated fundamentally new principles of politics that rapidly became widely accepted in England and Colonial America. When England tried to greatly increase control over the American colonies than before, the result was the American Revolution and the Declaration of Independence, which reflected many of John Locke’s ideas.
The ideals proclaimed in the Declaration of Independence¬—liberty, equality, unalienable rights, and consent of the governed—remained only empty ideals until the Constitution institutionalized them in a functioning government. The Constitution is indeed the product of compromises reached at the Convention, but it also reflects agreement on fundamental principles of enormous importance. The Constitutional Convention produced a document that remains the oldest of any nation, and that became a model for the world and object of veneration by Americans. More than any other single factor, the Constitution accounts for the fact that the United States became the most prosperous and powerful nation in history.
 

Copyright Dedication Contents
Author's Preface 
Introduction
Necessity of Government
The Concept of a Constitution 
Success of the American Constitution
1. LEADING TO LIBERTY
Constitutional Development in Ancient Times THE ANCIENT MIDDLE EAST
Oriental Despotism
Israel
Divine Right of Kings vs. Constitutional Government
CLASSICAL GREECE Political Science Socrates
Plato
Aristotle ROME
The Roman Republic The Roman Empire
2. FOUNTAIN OF FREEDOM America’s English Heritage
FROM EMPIRE TO NATION-STATE ENGLAND IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Common Law Kings vs. Tyrants Magna Carta
Parliament
ENGLAND AND THE EARLY MODERN AGE
The Future of Political Freedom in England Parliament vs. King
The Great Civil War
The English Republic
The Restoration
The Glorious Revolution Establishing Freedom The English Constitution
3. CONCEIVED IN LIBERTY
Constitutional Development in Colonial America
BASIC BELIEFS IN COLONIAL AMERICA The Puritan Exodus
Puritan Political Principles
Thomas Hooker and Connecticut
Roger Williams and Rhode Island
The Real American Revolution THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Self-Government in Colonial America
Toward Tyranny
Independence
The Declaration of Independence
The Declaration of Independence and the Concept of a Constitution
4. TO SECURE LIBERTY
The Constitutional Convention of 1787
UNDER THE ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION New State Constitutions
The Articles of Confederation
Shays' Rebellion
THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION
The Call for a Convention
The Men of the Convention Leading Delegates
The Manner of the Convention The Virginia Plan
The New Jersey Plan
Provisions of the New Jersey Plan Conflict and Compromise
Federalism: A Note About Terminology A Revolutionary Act?
A “Bundle of Compromises”
A New Order for the Ages
5. THE FOUNDERS PROPOSE
The Political Philosophy of the Constitution
The New Improved Science of Politics
The American Political Consensus
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF CONSTITUTIONAL
GOVERNMENT
The Purpose and End of Government Government by Consent
A Republican Form of Government Remedies for Diseases of Republicanism
THE MECHANICS OF GOOD GOVERNMENT Federalist #10—An Extended Republic Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances A note on Parliamentary Government Federalism
Judicial Review Political Progress
6. THE PEOPLE DECIDE
The Bill of Rights & The Ratification of the Constitution
RATIFICATION AND THE PROMISE OF THE BILL OF RIGHTS Dates of Ratification of the Constitution of the States
The People, Religious Liberty, and the First Amendment
TOWARD THE FIRST AMENDMENT
The Tide of American Opinion
Religious Liberty and the New Science of Politics Virginia’s Precedent for the Nation
The First Amendment
7. PROVIDENCE
The Constitution, the American Civil Religion, and the Future of Freedom
America’s Civil Religion The Future of Freedom
A Note on Sources About the Author
Other Books by the Author

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