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Karen OConnor and Larry Sabato

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American colonies served such a purpose for the British Crown ... Rejects the equity and utility of capitalism. Proudhon: Property is theft! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Karen OConnor and Larry Sabato


1
Karen OConnor and Larry Sabato
  • American Government Continuity and Change

2
Chapter 1
  • The Political LandscapePresentation 1.1

3
Presentation 1Where did the Ideas Come From?
4
Presentation Outline
  • From Aristotle to the Enlightenment
  • The Idea of Popular Consent
  • The Theory of Democratic Government
  • Why a Capitalist System?

5
From Aristotle to the Enlightenment
  • The Greek origins of democracy
  • Natural law as a basis for democratic governance
  • Society should be run according to ethical
    principles

Aristotle, 384-322 B.C
6
1a) The Greeks and Democratic Ideas
  • Aristotle and Plato were critics of democracy
    (equated with mob rule)
  • Polybius (203-120 B.C), a Greek hostage of the
    Romans, coined the term republic to describe
    the Roman system of government
  • Today, republican government refers to a
    mixed system with democratic non-democratic
    features

7
Aristotles Typology of Governments
8
1b) Christianity and Democracy
  • Christianitys ambiguous early stance toward
    political authority
  • Constantines use of Christianity as a basis for
    political support during the later Roman empire
  • Catholic support of divine right of kings

9
Christianity cont.
  • St. Thomas Aquinas revival of natural law
  • The persistence of divine right of kings as the
    basis of political authority in Europe

St. Thomas Aquinas, 1225-1274
10
Christianity and Democracy
  • The importance of the Protestant Reformation
  • Martin Luthers criticism of the Catholic Church
    excommunication
  • Salvation as a matter of personal faith

Martin Luther, 1483-1546
11
Christianity and Democracy
  • Religious revolutions sparked political
    revolutions throughout the Protestant world
  • Religious wars yielded to eventual tolerance of
    religious differences

Henry VIII, 1491-1547
12
1c) The Enlightenment
  • The Renaissance led to a period of great
    intellectual ferment in the 17th and 18th
    centuries
  • Thinkers began challenging the moral and
    political absolutism of the Dark Ages
  • The discovery of America created further
    incentives for discovery

13
2) The Idea of Popular Consent
  • The flowering of religious dissent in 16th
    century England
  • Separatists belief in self-governing
    congregations
  • Criticism of the Anglican Church as excessively
    Catholic
  • The prevalence of corruption in Separatist
    criticisms

14
The Pilgrims at Plymouth
The first sermon on the New England shore,
December 1620
15
2a) The Role of Political TheoriesThe Idea of
the Social Contract
  • Philosophers advanced theories based on many of
    the assumptions guiding political movements of
    the times.
  • The State of Nature what was human existence
    like before the creation of governments?

16
Thomas Hobbes Justification for Absolute Rule
  • Humanitys natural state war of all against all
  • To escape the state of nature, people agree to
    surrender most rights to an absolute sovereign
  • People retain the right of self-preservation

Thomas Hobbes, 1588-1679
17
John Lockes More Optimistic View
  • Humans are naturally sociable
  • Anti-social individuals disrupt natural
    communities, and necessitate govt.
  • The primary purpose of govt. protect of private
    property

John Locke1632-1704
18
Overview of Social Contract Theory
  • Authority originates from agreement between
    governors and the governed
  • Government limits the scope of freedom in order
    to offer security
  • The governed retain the right of rebellion
  • The language of John Locke is implicit in the
    Declaration of Independence

19
3) The Theory of Democratic Government
  • Colonists quickly began to establish
    participatory forms of government
  • The absence of established political norms as an
    important basis for democracy
  • As direct democracy proved unworkable, colonies
    began to establish indirect systems of democratic
    governance

20
3a) Distinction Direct vs. Indirect Democracy
  • Direct
  • Only workable in very small communities
  • Usually establish exclusive forms of citizenship
  • All members make decisions (usually by consensus)
  • Indirect
  • Enables the creation of larger political systems
  • Facilitates expanded citizenship
  • Majority rule as the basic decision rule

21
3b) A Democracy? or a Republic?
  • Colonists were suspicious of democracy (recall
    the Greek understanding mob rule)
  • Preferred to call their governments republics
  • Republic meant limited government with an active
    citizenry

22
4) Why a Capitalist System?
  • Colonists addressing the role of the government
    in the economy
  • The predominance of mercantilist economic
    arrangements in Europe
  • Mercantilism as a Kings economy

23
4a) Key Tenets of Mercantilism
  • Economic transactions as a zero-sum
    relationship a gain for a foreign trader is
    perceived as a loss for the domestic economy
  • The goal of mercantilism is self-sufficiency
    create dependent colonies with which to trade
  • American colonies served such a purpose for the
    British Crown

24
4b) The Colonists as Would-Be Capitalists
  • Key tenets of capitalism were being advanced
    around the time of the American Revolution
  • Adam Smiths defense of free trade

Adam Smith, 1723-1790
25
4c) Key Assumptions of Capitalism
  • Smith Self-interest is the most reliable basis
    for economic transactions (e.g. the invisible
    hand of the marketplace)
  • Two basic characteristics of capitalism a)
    private ownership of property and b) minimal
    regulation of market interactions
  • The U.S. as a laissez faire state from 1787-1932

26
4d) From the Laissez Faire to the Welfare State
  • The Great Depression fundamentally challenged
    basic capitalist assumptions
  • Franklin Roosevelts institution of the New Deal
    fundamentally altered the relationship between
    government and economy
  • Instituted the welfare state through the New Deal

27
4e) Welfarism in a Nutshell
  • Accepts the basic equity of most market
    interactions
  • However, welfare is based on the notion that
    society is not innately fair
  • John Rawls societys should be judged by how
    they treat their most vulnerable members (e.g.
    the poor, the very young and old, the sick)

28
4f) Other Economic SystemsSocialism
  • Rejects the equity and utility of capitalism
  • Proudhon Property is theft!
  • Socialists advocate public (e.g. government)
    ownership of all property
  • Believe that communities could cooperatively
    produce enough for all

29
Other Systems cont. Communism
  • A revolutionary variant of socialism espoused
    most famously by Karl Marx
  • Marx hypothesized the history evolved by stages
  • The highest stage of human evolution would be
    communism govt. would be unnecessary

30
Other Systems cont. Totalitarianism
  • An extreme manifestation of authoritarian govt.
  • Govt. assumes total authority over citizens
    through the use of secret police, terror,
    propaganda, and the rejection of civil liberties
  • One figure usually assumes absolute leadership
    (e.g. Hitler, Stalin, Saddam Hussein)

31
Totalitarianism cont.
  • Came to leadership of the Soviet Union after the
    death of Lenin
  • Killed millions of his own subjects
  • Used as a model for ruling by Saddam Hussein

Josef Stalin, 1879-1953
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