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Locke

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Who can participate? Democracy Direct and indirect - examples Dictatorship Autocracy and oligarchy - difference? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Locke


1
Lockes Foundations
  • Natural rights philosophy
  • Influenced Founding Fathers
  • Based on imagining what life would be like
    without government
  • Anarchy
  • Thomas Jefferson called these the Laws of
    Nature and of natures God in the Declaration of
    Independence
  • Man formed governments in order to preserve
    property and justice.
  • Did your community have any laws?
  • Protecting / preserving what?

2
Hobbes Foundations
  • Government is necessary to regulate humans who
    are basically evil
  • People must surrender to rulers in exchange for
    protection
  • Mans natural state is war and monarchies were
    needed to restrain it
  • People must give up certain rights to the monarch

3
Rousseaus Foundations
  • Man is good by nature, but corrupted by society
  • Political order is necessary
  • Ideal society has a contract between men, not
    between men and government
  • Government should be controlled by the general
    will of the people
  • Laws are acts of the people

4
Would anyone have the right to govern you?
  • Locke would say no, nor would you have the
    right to govern anyone else.
  • The only way that a person gets the right to
    govern is through the consent of the governed
  • People trade perfect freedom for increased
    security mutually agreeing to abide by the will
    of the majority.

5
Would you have any rights?
  • Life, liberty, and property
  • Right to defend these rights if necessary
  • Locke called these natural rights
  • We now call them fundamental, basic or human
    rights

6
Lockes Solution
  • Best way to solve the problem of the state of
    nature is a Social Contract
  • People give up natural freedoms in order to gain
    protection for their rights
  • The formation of a government which can create
    and enforce laws should be agreed upon by those
    involved
  • Basis for the formation of U.S. government
  • A social contract is also known as a compact or
    covenant
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