Common Sense Nation. Robert Curry
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Название: Common Sense Nation

Автор: Robert Curry

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Историческая литература

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isbn: 9781594038266

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СКАЧАТЬ continued to work in the moral sense and common sense tradition the Scots had founded. In part this broad use of the term reflects Reid’s enormous prestige in America. Also, there was a need for a shorthand term; “moral sense philosophy and common sense realism” is simply too long to be handy. More fundamentally, Reid, following as he did Hutcheson and Adam Smith, in many ways encompassed their thinking. In addition, many believed then and believe now that Reid provided Scottish Enlightenment philosophy with its crowning achievement. All of these factors made common sense realism the natural choice for use as the shorthand label for the whole tradition.

      If we want to understand the thinking of the Founders as revealed in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, we must first touch base with Thomas Reid and his Scottish colleagues. Is the importance of Reid and his colleagues to the Founders news to you? Have you perhaps never even heard of Thomas Reid? If so, what that means is you have not been provided with the keys to understanding the thinking of the Founders.

      The good news is that understanding their thinking is not going to be difficult for you. It is even fun, and it is well within your reach. All you need is common sense, and a brief survey of the territory so well known to the Founders, yet largely forgotten today.

      As I will attempt to make clear, the ideas of Reid and his Scottish colleagues shaped the American Enlightenment, the American experiment and American political thought.

      There is one point I must emphasize: to say the Scottish Enlightenment shaped the American experiment is not to diminish in any way the achievements of the Founders. Their astonishing achievements are in the first rank in the whole history of the world. To get a clear view of the tallest mountain peak, you may need to be standing on a nearby peak—and to be facing in the right direction. To understand the Founders, we need to understand on whose shoulders the Founders were standing.

      This book was written as a series of individual studies over a period of years. These studies have an overarching unity of purpose. They are the record of the explorations and discoveries I made as I pursued a path of understanding. That path kept revealing itself to me as I progressed. I could not have said ahead of time what I was going to learn along the way. Each study I have included here selects a strategic point over the buried past. These strategic points reveal the hidden outline of what has been lost.

      As a result of my journey, I can report to you that understanding the thinking of the Founders is a task worth doing. It is also the citizen’s duty and the patriot’s joyful obligation.

      I begin with the conventional wisdom regarding Locke and the Glorious Revolution.

       OVERTURE

       Locke’s Revolution

       “The supreme power in every commonwealth [is] but the joint power of every member of the society.”

      —JOHN LOCKE, TWO TREATISES OF GOVERNMENT

      No doubt this statement strikes you as merely a truism.

      That it does is testimony to the influence of John Locke. It is very difficult for us today to comprehend how radical this claim was at the time it was made, and how dangerous it was for Locke to make it. In England, and elsewhere, the royal sovereign was the supreme power. For Locke to have simply linked his name to the statement, as I have done at the top of the page, would have meant his death.

      In 1683, taking the unpublished manuscript of the Treatises with him, Locke managed to get himself smuggled out of England to safety in Holland. Agents of Charles II, who claimed absolute sovereignty by divine right, were in hot pursuit of him. The manuscript when eventually published contained this passage:

      “Absolute monarchy is inconsistent with Civil Society, and so can be no form of Civil Government at all.”

      Having such thoughts then could be fatal. If Locke had been caught, the king would not have needed the damning evidence of that manuscript. Locke had already become too closely associated with opposition to Charles’ rule to be safe in England.

      Locke only returned to Britain when he escorted the princess of Orange from Holland to become Queen Mary. The Glorious Revolution of 1688 had put an end to the Stuart kings’ claim to absolute sovereignty by divine right, and established a monarchy of limited powers under William and Mary.

      The Two Treatises of Government did not appear until 1690, and even then they were published anonymously. Locke only acknowledged his authorship in a codicil to his will. Although it had been written before the revolution, the preface claimed that the work was intended to justify Britain’s Glorious Revolution, “to establish the Throne of Our Great Restorer, our present King William; to make good his Title, in the Consent of the People.”

      What was politically possible for revolution to achieve in Britain in 1688 was a monarchy of somewhat limited powers, limited at least by a Bill of Rights which guaranteed the people some basic protections from governmental power. When nearly a century later the Founders staked their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor on the American bid for liberty, it was to Locke that the Founders turned to justify their right to revolution and to government by the consent of the people. However, very different circumstances made it possible for the Founders to go much further than what was accomplished by the Glorious Revolution. No doubt the Founders went even further than Locke imagined, but Locke had staked out the basis of their claim to liberty.

      When independence was won, the American Founders did not follow the example of the Glorious Revolution by setting up a parliament and a monarchy in America. Much had happened in America by 1776 that explains the very different form of government that came out of the American Revolution.

      A look into the colonial college named in honor of William and Mary can give us a clue about that different outcome. As a student at William and Mary, Thomas Jefferson came under the influence of William Small. Small, who mentored Jefferson during his time at college and afterwards, was a member in good standing of the Scottish Enlightenment. He came to America from Scotland to teach at William and Mary just in time to guide Jefferson’s studies there during the most intellectually influential years of Jefferson’s life.

      In the same way, John Witherspoon, another full-fledged member of the Scottish Enlightenment, mentored James Madison at Princeton. In addition, the tutors who educated Jefferson and Madison before college were also Scots. All these Scots were part of a wave of scholars and clergy that brought the ideas of the Scottish Enlightenment to colonial America.

      The Founders did not make George Washington a monarch, nor did they design a parliament on the British model. They did not provide for an aristocracy; in fact they ruled out an aristocracy. They also ruled out a politically empowered church allied with the government. The Founders made a radical break with the past. They set out to do what had not been done before: to design a system whereby the people of a geographically extended and diverse territory would govern themselves. They boldly went where none had gone before.

      The Scots had provided the Founders with radically new ideas that were to enable them to fashion government along unprecedented lines—and to find a hitherto undreamed of way to realize Locke’s revolutionary claim that the supreme political power in every commonwealth is the people. When it came time to lay the foundation for the new nation and its government, the Founders went to work thoroughly grounded in the philosophical arguments the Scots advanced. It was those arguments that showed the Founders a way forward. It enabled СКАЧАТЬ