Government Of Laws: Political Theory, Religion, And The American Founding
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Overview
In A Government of Laws, which includes a new preface, Ellis Sandoz re-evaluates the traditional understanding of the philosophic and intellectual background of the American founding. Through an exhaustive assessment of Renaissance, medieval, and ancient political philosophy, he shows that the founding fathers were consciously and explicitly seeking to create a political order that would meet the demands of human nature and society. This rigorous and searching analysis of the sources of political and constitutional theory generates an original and provocative approach to American thought and experience.
Synopsis
In A Government of Laws, which includes a new preface, Ellis Sandoz re-evaluates the traditional understanding of the philosophic and intellectual background of the American founding. Through an exhaustive assessment of Renaissance, medieval, and ancient political philosophy, he shows that the founding fathers were consciously and explicitly seeking to create a political order that would meet the demands of human nature and society. This rigorous and searching analysis of the sources of political and constitutional theory generates an original and provocative approach to American thought and experience.
Booknews
In a series of previously published essays, Sandoz (political science, LSU) reevaluates the traditional understanding of the philosophic and intellectual background of the American founding in light of an assessment of Renaissance, medieval, and ancient political philosophy. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Editorials
From the Publisher
"One of the great strengths of this unusually learned and thoughtful book lies in the light it indirectly sheds on the very questions it does not directly engage. . . . Sandoz forcefully draws attention to the resonance of the great philosophers of ancient and medieval Europe in the American Founders' concern, thought, and practice . . . he argues cogently that modern ideas of freedom and democracy would be incomprehensible if abstracted from the Christian inheritance of Western civilization."β Reviews in American History