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    As a result of their ideas on the role of government in public and private lives‚ Thomas Jefferson and James Madison were two of the most influential Founding Fathers. Perhaps their greatest influence was in regard to religion and the separation of church and state. To this day‚ their writings are influential to how we perceive the role of government in religious matters. Two of the leading writings from Jefferson and Madison are the Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom and the Memorial and Remonstrance

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    A utopian community would be a world without oppression‚ discrimination or social hierarchy—essentially‚ an ideal place to live. However‚ does a perfect society really exist? In Sir Thomas More’s Utopia‚ More flirts with the concept of a utopian community with regard to geography‚ city structure‚ labor‚ government and religion. Considering these aspects‚ the community depicted in Utopia is primarily a success‚ with limited failures. In Book II of Utopia‚ Raphael Hythloday‚ a traveler who visited

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    In The Leviathan‚ Thomas Hobbes uses a scientific method to analyze humankind. Additionally‚ he examines natural law‚ the social and political contracts. The natural condition results in war through desire‚ but we are able to escape this through seeking peace. By using the social contract‚ humans can become peaceful. By using reason‚ Hobbes is able to explain the human condition according to him. According to Hobbes‚ the natural condition of humanity results in war for one main reason - desire. The

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    aving written the Constitution and having been elected the third President‚ Thomas Jefferson cemented his place in United States history as a brilliant and passionate statesman. Even though Jefferson was passionate about Science‚ he became a lawyer and was a representative in the Virginia House of Burgess. Throughout his early political career‚ Jefferson argued for American self-governance and eventual independence. He was one of the most important figures in liberal and enlightenment thinking

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    How successful was Edward Heath as leader of the Conservative Party between 1965 and 1974? Edward Heath led the conservative party through a difficult and revolutionary period in British politics from the years 1965 to 1974‚ punctuated by the joining of the ECC in 1973‚ prolonged damaging strikes‚ high levels of inflation‚ and many monumental U-turns through the period of his office. The concept of change is most notably seen right from the offset of his leadership as he was the first conservative

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    Summary: Thomas Aquinas brought forth the belief of reliance to God through looking at natural law. To begin‚ relation to practical reason distinguishes the Law of Nature‚ which is self-known. Aquinas states that anything self-known is known either in itself or in relation to us‚ mainly focusing on the portion of known in itself. Those things known in itself are known when its ending belongs to the intelligible meaning of the subject. Although‚ sometimes‚ those ignorant to the subject do not see

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    In his book The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson‚ Daniel J. Boorstin attempted to “recapture the Jeffersonian world of ideas” by reconstructing the writings of the Jeffersonian from the American Philosophy Society. He attempted to show the relationship between the different Jeffersonian conceptions‚ starting with God and ending with society. Furthermore‚ Boorstin’s attempted to bring coherency to the Jeffersonian tradition in order to save it from the “vagueness which has enveloped much of liberal

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    As a propagandist‚ Thomas Paine‚ author of Rights of Man‚ does not account in the passage in question for the complexities of America and simplifies the task of balancing individual rights with the ideals of society. America’s lack of unison‚ its inability to resolve tensions between society and the individual‚ and its economic disparity has prevented Paine’s presentation of American society from developing into a realistic portrayal of the country. While American society has been plagued with social

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    Common Sense for the Common Good “Man knows no Master save creating HEAVEN‚ /Or those whom Choice and common Good ordain” (Paine 1). Preceding the first lines of his introduction‚ Thomas Paine utilizes this quote from James Thompson to set the mood and express the understated meaning of his ground-breaking pamphlet‚ Common Sense. Published in 1776 during a time of heated tension between Colonial America and Great Britain‚ Common Sense became an influential force from which the ideologies of the

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    individuals to develop paradisiacal ideologies that aimed to improved and reform the corrupt establishment; in some cases‚ these ideologies went on to become economic systems. The first among these thinkers to conceive a paradise free of corruption was Sir Thomas More. In his 1516 book‚ Utopia‚ More aims to illuminate and eradicate the socio-political corruptions in Europe by creating a more reformed society. Though his community is isolated from the rest of the world‚ scholars govern More’s Utopia; creating

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