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The Free and the Virtuous: Why the Founders Knew That Character Mattered

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What did liberty mean to the American founding fathers? It was not just about limited government, protecting rights, and leaving people free to live their own definition of the good life. It was to be a movement toward the highest human flourishing. A new genus of liberty had taken root here in the fresh American soil, and there was a special something-a moral discipline-that was inherent in the American character that would allow it to thrive. Above all, real liberty was dependent upon good character. The new nation had barely gotten any traction, however, when the founders' ideal of a liberty based upon virtue began to lose its luster. Overtime, liberty gradually became more about rights and less about the responsibility to be good. Character no longer matters, and we don't seem to mourn the loss.

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£108.00
Product Details
Lexington Books
1793601615 / 9781793601612
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
15/08/2020
English
Thrillers
162 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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