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Faith, Reason, and Consent: Legislating Morality in Early Amerian States (Law and Society) PDF

309 Pages·2008·0.888 MB·English
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Preview Faith, Reason, and Consent: Legislating Morality in Early Amerian States (Law and Society)

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Americans commonly insist that government should not legislate morality. The early American state founders, revolutionaries known for their commitment to liberty, were equally concerned about what kind of morality both should and should not be legislated. In U.S. state constitutions and legislation, they exhibited a commitment to morality grounded primarily on the fixed principles of both natural rights and Christian theology. Scholars have often concluded that popular sovereignty emerged from the founding period as the predominant political ideal. However, the constitutional and legislative tradition reveals something quite different that the principles of natural rights and Christian theology were embraced prior to, and in actuality provided the basis for, the principle of popular sovereignty in the minds of the state founders.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.