A Declaration for the Ages: Consent of Governed
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Beschrijving
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For most of human history, power justified itself.Kings ruled by inheritance. Empires governed through force. Laws demanded obedience because authority declared them binding. Yet beneath every throne and every government, one question persisted: What makes power legitimate?A Declaration for the Ages: The Consent of the Governed traces humanity's long search for an answer. Beginning with Augustine in the aftermath of Rome's collapse, moving through Thomas Aquinas, Magna Carta, and John Locke, the book follows the gradual transformation of political legitimacy-from power rooted in force to authority grounded in justice, law, natural rights, and consent.That centuries-long evolution reaches its decisive turning point in 1776.The Declaration of Independence did more than announce separation from Britain. For the first time in history, a nation openly justified its existence through universal principles: that all people possess inherent rights, and that governments derive "their just powers from the consent of the governed."The Declaration transformed legitimacy itself.Blending intellectual history with narrative storytelling, this book explores how that revolutionary idea reshaped the modern world-from the French Revolution, to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, to the rebuilding of South Africa after apartheid.At its heart, this is not simply a history of political philosophy or democracy. It is the story of a single enduring question: Why does power deserve obedience?And how the answer changed history forever.
For most of human history, power justified itself.Kings ruled by inheritance. Empires governed through force. Laws demanded obedience because authority declared them binding. Yet beneath every throne and every government, one question persisted: What makes power legitimate?A Declaration for the Ages: The Consent of the Governed traces humanity's long search for an answer. Beginning with Augustine in the aftermath of Rome's collapse, moving through Thomas Aquinas, Magna Carta, and John Locke, the book follows the gradual transformation of political legitimacy-from power rooted in force to authority grounded in justice, law, natural rights, and consent.That centuries-long evolution reaches its decisive turning point in 1776.The Declaration of Independence did more than announce separation from Britain. For the first time in history, a nation openly justified its existence through universal principles: that all people possess inherent rights, and that governments derive "their just powers from the consent of the governed."The Declaration transformed legitimacy itself.Blending intellectual history with narrative storytelling, this book explores how that revolutionary idea reshaped the modern world-from the French Revolution, to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, to the rebuilding of South Africa after apartheid.At its heart, this is not simply a history of political philosophy or democracy. It is the story of a single enduring question: Why does power deserve obedience?And how the answer changed history forever.
AmazonPages: 47, Paperback, Independently published
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