The politics of liberty in England and revolutionary America
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Bibliographic Information
The politics of liberty in England and revolutionary America
Cambridge University Press, 2004
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 433-450) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This study locates the philosophical origins of the Anglo-American political and constitutional tradition in the philosophical, theological, and political controversies in seventeenth-century England. By examining the quarrel it identifies the source of modern liberal, republican and conservative ideas about natural rights and government in the seminal works of the Exclusion Whigs Locke, Sidney, and Tyrrell and their philosophical forebears Hobbes, Grotius, Spinoza, and Pufendorf. This study illuminates how these first Whigs and their diverse eighteenth-century intellectual heirs such as Bolingbroke, Montesquieu, Hume, Blackstone, Otis, Jefferson, Burke, and Paine contributed to the formation of Anglo-American political and constitutional theory in the crucial period from the Glorious Revolution through to the American Revolution and the creation of a distinctly American understanding of rights and government in the first state constitutions.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: re-examining the roots of Anglo-American political thought
- Part I. The Divine Right Challenge to Natural Liberty: 1. The attack on the Catholic natural law
- 2. Calvinism and parliamentary resistance theory
- 3. The problem of Grotius and Hobbes
- Part II. The Whig Politics of Liberty in England: 4. James Tyrrell: the voice of moderate Whiggism
- 5. The Pufendorfian movement: moderate Whig sovereignty theory
- 6. Algernon Sidney and the old Republicanisms
- 7. A new Republican England
- 8. Natural rights in Locke's two treatises
- 9. Lockean liberal constitutionalism
- 10. The glorious revolution and the catonic response
- Part III. The Whig Legacy in America: 12. British constitutionalism and the challenge of empire
- 13. Thomas Jefferson and the radical theory of empire
- 14. Tom Paine and popular sovereignty
- 15. Revolutionary constitutionalism: laboratories of radical Whiggism
- Conclusions
- Notes
- Bibliography.
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