The Constitutional Convention and the Formation of the UnionWinton U. Solberg University of Illinois Press, 1990 - 428 sider This book contains James Madison's notes on the debates which provide a first-hand view of the drafting of the nation's fundamental charter. An introduction by Solberg places the origins of the Constitution in the broader historical perspective of the development of political theory and constitutional practice in Western civilization. The book also links the formation of the Constitution to the events of the American Revolution from the Stamp Act Crisis to the Bill of Rights. Solberg provides background on the ratification of the Constitution, biographical sketches of each participant in the Philadelphia Convention, and population figures on which representation was to be based. - Back cover. |
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Side xxiii
... reason was ascribed now to the steady and brilliant illumination of God revealed in Holy Writ , pronouncements of the Church Fathers , and rulings of the Church . People soon found good use for these ideas , which permitted defense of ...
... reason was ascribed now to the steady and brilliant illumination of God revealed in Holy Writ , pronouncements of the Church Fathers , and rulings of the Church . People soon found good use for these ideas , which permitted defense of ...
Side xxvi
... reason , and word of God - had converged . Renaissance - awakened interest in classical antiquity led to reviving the pre - Christian , Ciceronian identification of nat- ural law with universal reason . ( Reacquaintance with the ...
... reason , and word of God - had converged . Renaissance - awakened interest in classical antiquity led to reviving the pre - Christian , Ciceronian identification of nat- ural law with universal reason . ( Reacquaintance with the ...
Side xcii
... Reason , both as man's distinguishing faculty and as a quality of the universe , became pre - eminent . Yet since pure reason might mislead man ( as both preacher and philosophe agreed ) , experience was its handmaid . Thus Dickinson's ...
... Reason , both as man's distinguishing faculty and as a quality of the universe , became pre - eminent . Yet since pure reason might mislead man ( as both preacher and philosophe agreed ) , experience was its handmaid . Thus Dickinson's ...
Innhold
THE GENESIS OF AMERICAN | xiii |
THE CONFEDERATION | xviii |
CONTENTS AND SOURCES OF DOCUMENTS | cxii |
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2ª branch agreed agst amendments American appointed Articles of Confederation authority Ayes bill of attainder Britain charter citizens clause colonies Committee Cong Constitution Continental Congress council Court David Hume debate Declaration defend Delaware delegates duties election electors equal established Executive favor Federal Convention foreign Framers GERRY Govt House of Representatives Hume impeachment independence interest Jersey John Adams Judges Judiciary king lature legislative Legislature liberty Madison Maryland MASON Massachusetts ment Montesquieu MORRIS motion N. C. ay National Legislature nature necessary noes North Carolina object Parliament Pennsylvania person Philadelphia PINKNEY political President principles proposed province question Randolph ratification representation republican Resolved Revolution Richard Henry Lee Second Continental Congress Sect Section secure Senate separation of powers SHERMAN slaves sovereignty Stamp Act Congress supreme theory thereof thought tion tive treaties Union United Virginia vote whole number WILSON York