This essay examines the American Founders’ convictions about government as expressed through key documents such as the Declaration of Independence, the Federalist Papers, and the Constitution. The goal of this paper is to answer two fundamental questions on behalf of the architects of the American state: Who should rule and what is the main purpose of government? In answering these questions, this analysis also probes into the unique amalgam of both ancient and contemporary political theory that influenced the decisions and opinions of the Founders. Ultimately, this essay highlights their support of a limited republican government run by the people with aims to protect liberties and provide the ability for its citizens to pursue virtue and ...
Despite their lack of official or legal status, it would be difficult to overstate the influence of ...
The Tea Partiers are not entirely wrong to warn about the potential of the state to repress freedom,...
Despite their lack of official or legal status, it would be difficult to overstate the influence of ...
Federalists and Anti-Federalists were different kinds of republicans insofar as they offered opposit...
Federalists and Anti-Federalists were different kinds of republicans insofar as they offered opposit...
The topic of this panel is the Declaration of Independence, to which I devoted a chapter of my recen...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
The origins of the U.S. Constitution are the source of endless debate. What did the founders intend ...
When thinking about the American Revolution, one is soon confronted by the puzzle of precisely which...
Since the nineteenth century, Americans have worked consistently to liberate their national governme...
This essay examines three competing interpretations of the Founding Fathers that were made in the co...
This essay examines three competing interpretations of the Founding Fathers that were made in the co...
This paper examines the classical themes and ancient historical examples presented through the Feder...
The origins of the U.S. Constitution are the source of endless debate. What did the founders intend ...
This Article explores the revolutionary period and the early national period of American constitutio...
Despite their lack of official or legal status, it would be difficult to overstate the influence of ...
The Tea Partiers are not entirely wrong to warn about the potential of the state to repress freedom,...
Despite their lack of official or legal status, it would be difficult to overstate the influence of ...
Federalists and Anti-Federalists were different kinds of republicans insofar as they offered opposit...
Federalists and Anti-Federalists were different kinds of republicans insofar as they offered opposit...
The topic of this panel is the Declaration of Independence, to which I devoted a chapter of my recen...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
The origins of the U.S. Constitution are the source of endless debate. What did the founders intend ...
When thinking about the American Revolution, one is soon confronted by the puzzle of precisely which...
Since the nineteenth century, Americans have worked consistently to liberate their national governme...
This essay examines three competing interpretations of the Founding Fathers that were made in the co...
This essay examines three competing interpretations of the Founding Fathers that were made in the co...
This paper examines the classical themes and ancient historical examples presented through the Feder...
The origins of the U.S. Constitution are the source of endless debate. What did the founders intend ...
This Article explores the revolutionary period and the early national period of American constitutio...
Despite their lack of official or legal status, it would be difficult to overstate the influence of ...
The Tea Partiers are not entirely wrong to warn about the potential of the state to repress freedom,...
Despite their lack of official or legal status, it would be difficult to overstate the influence of ...