Results for 'American Civil Liberties Union'

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  1. National security tools should not infringe on civil liberties.American Civil Liberties Union - 2014 - In David M. Haugen (ed.), War. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, A part of Gale, Cengage Learning.
     
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  2. The Trial of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn by the American Civil Liberties Union.Corliss Lamont - 1969 - Science and Society 33 (3):375-377.
     
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  3.  4
    BRCA1 and 2.David Koepsell - 2015-03-19 - In Michael Boylan (ed.), Who Owns You? Wiley. pp. 88–100.
    From the late 1980s, scientists began concentrating their search for genes presumed responsible for inherited tendencies to get ovarian and breast cancers on chromosome 17. The Berkeley group and others around the world were closing in on the sequence when Mark Skolnick, a founder of Myriad Genetics, announced successfully isolating and cloning the BRCA1 mutation. In 1994, Myriad and other cooperating parties first filed a patent for the BRCA1 mutation they isolated and then in 1995 they also filed patents for (...)
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  4.  33
    Religious Liberty and the Secular State. [REVIEW]Loyd D. Easton - 1990 - Idealistic Studies 20 (2):180-181.
    This is a timely book in its central theme, appearing as it does in the midst of the bicentennial celebration of the U. S. Constitution and also a time of spirited controversy over the substance of the Constitution in relation to the Supreme Court and the Executive. It is also a philosophical book of more permanent interest in its careful elucidation of meanings as it closely documents supporting grounds and arguments in a clear, pointed style without the preachy rhetoric of (...)
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  5.  22
    The civil liberties in the american community.Donald Meiklejohn - 1940 - Ethics 51 (1):1-21.
  6.  16
    Civil Liberty.James Dybikowski - 1981 - American Philosophical Quarterly 18 (4):339 - 346.
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  7. Dimensions of Tolerance: What Americans Believe About Civil Liberties.Herbert Mcclosky & Alida Brill - 1986 - Ethics 96 (2):386-399.
  8.  64
    Civil Rights Vs. Civil Liberties: The Case of Discriminatory Verbal Harassment.Thomas C. Grey - 1991 - Social Philosophy and Policy 8 (2):81-107.
    American liberals believe that both civil liberties and civil rights are harmonious aspects of a basic commitment to human rights. But recently these two clusters of values have seemed increasingly to conflict – as, for example, with the feminist claim that the legal toleration of pornography, long a goal sought by civil libertarians, actually violates civil rights as a form of sex discrimination.Here I propose an interpretation of the conflict of civil rights and (...)
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  9.  19
    Dimensions of Liberal Self-Satisfaction: Civil Liberties, Liberal Theory, and Elite-Mass DifferencesDimensions of Tolerance: What Americans Believe About Civil Liberties. Herbert McClosky, Alida Brill.Jennifer L. Hochschild - 1986 - Ethics 96 (2):386-.
  10.  18
    Introduction.Myles W. Jackson - 2015 - Perspectives on Science 23 (1):1-12.
    Gene patenting has captured the headlines for the past four years, thanks in large part to the lawsuit the American Civil Liberties Union and the Public Patent Foundation brought against Myriad Genetics for the patents on the breast cancer genes, BRCA 1 and 2. Despite their recent celebrity, human gene patents have been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office for over thirty years. The commodification of the human body is not all that recent: (...)
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  11.  18
    The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive.Michael Ruse - unknown
    arly in December of 1981, the federal courtroom in Little Rock, Arkansas, was packed. It was the first week of a trial brought on by the American Civil Liberties Union to challenge the constitutionality of a state law passed earlier that year. The law mandated "balanced treatment," in the publicly supported schools, between evolutionary ideas and so-called Creation Science, better known as the early chapters of Genesis taken absolutely literally (Ruse 1988). By the end of the (...)
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  12.  85
    Religion and science in an advanced scientific culture.Langdon Gilkey - 1987 - Zygon 22 (2):165-178.
    These are reflections on the Arkansas creationist trial by a witness for the American Civil Liberties Union. The following points are stressed: First, religion took the lead in defending science at the trial. Second, the appearance of creation science is a function not only of Protestant fudamentalism but also of the establishment of science in our wider culture. It represents a “deviant science” in such a culture. Third, our century has manifested many such bizarre unions of (...)
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  13.  54
    Book review: Coeckelbergh, Mark (2022): The political philosophy of AI. [REVIEW]Michael W. Schmidt - 2024 - TATuP - Zeitschrift Für Technikfolgenabschätzung in Theorie Und Praxis 33 (1):68–69.
    Mark Coeckelbergh starts his book with a very powerful picture based on a real incident: On the 9th of January 2020, Robert Williams was wrongfully arrested by Detroit police officers in front of his two young daughters, wife and neighbors. For 18 hours the police would not disclose the grounds for his arrest (American Civil Liberties Union 2020; Hill 2020). The decision to arrest him was primarily based on a facial detection algorithm which matched Mr. Williams’ (...)
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  14.  7
    Civil Wrongs and Religious Liberty.Steven Yates - 1994 - Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 6 (1-2):67-86.
    The civil rights movement has broken away from its religious roots which once provided it firm support and, indeed, it has become a threat to those roots. In fact, the past thirty years evidence two civil rights movements. The original civil rights movement promoted equal opportunity and presupposed a constrained vision of human possibilities compatible with Christianity, The revised civil rights agenda, which had replaced it by 1971, promoted preferential policies dubbed "affirmative action" based on an (...)
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  15. Hobbes, civil law, liberty and the Elements of Law.Patricia Springborg - 2016 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 19 (1):47-67.
    When he gave his first political work the title The Elements of Law Natural and Politic, Hobbes signalled an agenda to revise and incorporate continental Roman and Natural Law traditions for use in Great Britain, and from first to last he remained faithful to this agenda, which it took his entire corpus to complete. The success of his project is registered in the impact Hobbes had upon the continental legal system in turn, specific aspects of his theory, as for instance (...)
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  16.  4
    American liberty and "natural law".Eugene C. Gerhart - 1953 - Littleton, Colo.: F.B. Rothman.
    Is "natural law" actually the "Laws of Nature" as Thomas Jefferson explains in the Declaration of Independence, meaning the rights of Life, Liberty & the pursuit of Happiness, or the ecclesiastical view which holds that laws of the government must conform to "natural laws" in order to be binding? This text examines this conflict, yet leads the reader to draw his own conclusions.
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  17.  5
    Conceived in liberty: the American worldview in theory and practice.John Joseph Tierney - 2016 - New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.
    Conceived in Liberty is a cultural, sociological and geopolitical review of the uniquely American notion that the country and its people are "exceptional." While all nations have their own patriotic commitments, no other people have outwardly declared their power as vigorously as have Americans, especially since World War II. John J. Tierney, Jr. advances the idea that liberty is the singular source of the power of the American worldview and all other elements of this society--equality, patience, charity, justice, (...)
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  18.  15
    To look like men of war: visual transformation narratives of African American Union SoldiersQuand l’uniforme fait l’homme libre : les soldats noirs dans la Guerre civile américaine.Sarah Jones Weicksel - 2015 - Clio 40.
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  19.  13
    Die Ninegalla-Hymne: Die Wohnungnahme Inannas in Nippur in altbabylonischer Zeit.Miguel Civil & Hermann Behrens - 2000 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 (4):674.
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  20.  24
    Išme-Dagan and Enlil's ChariotIsme-Dagan and Enlil's Chariot.Miguel Civil - 1968 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 88 (1):3.
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  21.  6
    The Anzu-Bird and Scribal Whimsies.M. Civil - 1972 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 92 (2):271.
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  22.  15
    John Locke: philosopher of American liberty: why our founders fought for "life, liberty, and property".Mary-Elaine Swanson - 2012 - Ventura, California: Nordskog Publishing.
    Mary-Elaine Swanson has done an invaluable service for this and subsequent generations by resurrecting awareness and presenting an accurate knowledge of John Locke and his reasoning through an uncensored view of his life, writings, and incalculable influence on America. This book will help Americans understand the importance of Locke's thinking for American constitutionalism today. You will learn the real meaning of the "law of nature" as it was embraced in Colonial America, and the separation of church and state embraced (...)
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  23.  3
    The Anglo-American tradition of liberty: a view from Europe.João Carlos Espada - 2016 - New York,: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    Karl R. Popper: The open society and its enemies -- Ralf Dahrendorf: Liberty and civil society -- Raymond Plant: Social welfare without class warfare -- Gertrude Himmelfarb and Irving Kristol: The moral imagination -- Raymond Aron: The opium of the intellectuals -- Friedrich A. Hayek: The constitution of liberty -- Isaiah Berlin: Liberty and pluralism -- Michael J. Oakeshott: The conservative disposition -- Leo Strauss: Relativism and the crisis of modernity -- Edmund Burke: Liberty and duty -- James Madison (...)
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  24.  29
    To Look Like Men of War: Visual Transformation Narratives of African American Union Soldiers (1861-1865).Sarah Jones Weicksel - 2014 - Clio 40:137-152.
    Cet article analyse le rôle des vêtements dans la métamorphose d’esclaves afro-américains en soldats de l’Union pendant la Guerre civile (1861-1865). Il explore la manière et la raison pour laquelle les uniformes militaires portent un tel poids narratif dans les portraits de ces hommes. Les textes, images, objets, gravures et photographies sont étudiés dans le contexte de la perception du corps au xixe siècle et des nouvelles théories de l’anthropologie physique et de la phrénologie. L’article souligne le rôle de (...)
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  25.  6
    A New Continent of Liberty: Eunomia in Native American Literature from Occom to Erdrich: by Geoff Hamilton, Charlottesville, University of Virginia Press, 2019, 220 pp., $55.00.Andre Furlani - 2022 - The European Legacy 27 (5):512-514.
    “It is the spirit of humanity, that which animates both so-called savages and civilized nations, working through a man, and not the man expressing himself, that interests us most,” writes Henry Dav...
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  26. The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy.American Organizing Committee - 2000 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 9:vii-x.
    One enduring legacy of the twentieth century will be the slow, certain transformation of the world from insular civilizations to interactive societies enmeshed in global systems of electronic communication, economics, and politics. Financial news from Thailand or Brazil is often more important globally than political events in the old centers of power. Some bemoan the uncertainty and flux of all this. However, the mutual definition of the world’s societies presents an extraordinary opportunity to humanize a situation that all too quickly (...)
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  27. The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy.American Organizing Committee - 2001 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 10:ix-xii.
    One enduring legacy of the twentieth century will be the slow, certain transformation of the world from insular civilizations to interactive societies enmeshed in global systems of electronic communication, economics, and politics. Financial news from Thailand or Brazil is often more important globally than political events in the old centers of power. Some bemoan the uncertainty and flux of all this. However, the mutual definition of the world’s societies presents an extraordinary opportunity to humanize a situation that all too quickly (...)
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  28. The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy.American Organizing Committee - 2000 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 7:vii-x.
    One enduring legacy of the twentieth century will be the slow, certain transformation of the world from insular civilizations to interactive societies enmeshed in global systems of electronic communication, economics, and politics. Financial news from Thailand or Brazil is often more important globally than political events in the old centers of power. Some bemoan the uncertainty and flux of all this. However, the mutual definition of the world’s societies presents an extraordinary opportunity to humanize a situation that all too quickly (...)
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  29. The Union as a Basic Institution of Society.Mark R. Reiff - 2021 - American Philosophical Association Blog.
    While unionization is usually evaluated as an aspect of freedom of association—the idea being that workers have the right to associate and form unions if they want and have an equal right not to do so if they don't, I argue that this is a mistake. Instead of merely allowing unions to form or not depending on the preferences of workers, I argue that unions are a basic and therefore necessary institution of a just society. After analyzing and criticizing the (...)
     
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  30.  21
    Between Civil Libertarianism and Executive Unilateralism: An Institutional Process Approach to Rights during Wartime.Richard H. Pildes & Samuel Issacharoff - 2004 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 5 (1):1-45.
    Times of heightened risk to the physical safety of their citizens inevitably cause democracies to recalibrate their institutions and processes and to reinterpret existing legal norms, with greater emphasis on security, and less on individual liberty, than in "normal" times. This article explores the ways in which the American courts have responded to the tension between civil liberties and national security in times of crises. This history illustrates that courts have rejected both of the two polar positions (...)
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  31.  30
    Abramson, Jeffrey. Minerva's Owl: The Tradition of Western Political Thought. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2009. ix+ 388 pp. Paper, $18.95. Alexiou, Evangelos. Der “Euagoras” des Isokrates: Ein Kommentar. Untersuc-hungen zur antiken Literatur und Geshichte. Vol. 101. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2010. xi+ 238 pp. Cloth,€ 93.41. [REVIEW]Its Civil Wars - 2011 - American Journal of Philology 132:169-175.
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  32. Problem: The Moral Foundations of Civil, Political, and Economic Liberty.Moorehouse F. X. Millar - 1940 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 16:154.
     
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  33.  1
    Liberty and Community: The Political Philosophy of William Ernest Hocking.Robert B. Thigpen - 1972 - The Hague,: Springer.
    This study of the political philosophy of William Ernest Hocking be gan as a doctoral dissertation at Tulane University. Hocking (1873- 1966) was for many years Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy, and Civil Polity at Harvard University. Although he is relatively well-known among American philosophers, particularly by students of metaphysics and the philosophy of religion, very little atten tion has been given to his political philosophy. Some general studies of his thought summarize his political writings in (...)
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  34. Empire and Liberty in Adam Ferguson’s Republicanism.Elena Yi-Jia Zeng - 2022 - History of European Ideas 48 (7):909-929.
    Adam Ferguson’s imperial thought casts new light on the age-old republican dilemma of the tension between empire and liberty. Generations of republican writers had been haunted by this issue as the decline of Rome proved that imperial expansion would eventually ruin the liberty of a state. Many eighteenth-century Scottish thinkers regarded this as an insoluble conundrum and thus became critics of empire. Ferguson shared their basic views but, paradoxically, was still able to defend the British Empire in the debates over (...)
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  35.  24
    Atra-ḫasīs; The Babylonian Story of the FloodThe Sumerian Flood StoryAtra-hasis; The Babylonian Story of the Flood.Hope Nash Wolfe, W. G. Lambert, A. R. Millard & M. Civil - 1973 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (1):75.
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  36.  2
    Equality in Liberty and Justice.Antony Flew - 2001 - Transaction Publishers.
    Equality in Liberty and Justice is an integrated collection of essays in political philosophy, divided into two parts. The first examines (classically) liberal ideas-the ideas of the Founding Fathers of the American republic-and some of the applications and the rejections of such ideas in our contemporary world. Among other questions about liberty and responsibility it considers, in the context of the imprisonment and psychiatric treatment of dissidents in the psychiatric hospitals of the former Soviet Union, Plato's suggestion that (...)
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  37.  13
    Power Tends to Corrupt: Lord Acton's Study of Liberty.Christopher Lazarski - 2012 - Northern Illinois University Press.
    Introduction -- Acton's life and mission -- Part I. The foundation of liberty -- Part II. Anglo-American liberty -- Part III. The liberty of revolutionary dreams -- Part IV. Civic versus civil liberty.
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  38.  16
    Beyond ‘civil religion’ – on Pascalian influence in Tocqueville.Yuji Takayama - 2022 - History of European Ideas 48 (5):518-535.
    ABSTRACT In volume two of his work Democracy in America, Alexis de Tocqueville argued that religion could guarantee individual liberties against the tyranny of the majority. However, in volume one of this work, Tocqueville presented a conventional ‘civil religion’ as a phenomenon that was identical to or subsumed by American social mores or opinions. Thus, the following questions are raised: How can such a religion represent a brake on potential tyranny? How can genuine religion be distinguished from (...)
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  39.  4
    The American Moralist: On Law, Ethics, and Government.George Anastaplo - 1992
    The essays collected here, somewhat autobiographical in their effect, range from a discussion of the despair of the Cold War and Vietnam in 1966 to reflections on the euphoria over the ending of the Cold War in Eastern Europe in 1990. The opening essays are general in nature: exploring the foundation and limitation of sound morality; examining what is "American" about American morality; measuring all by the yardsticks provided by classical and modern philosophers. Anastaplo's overriding concern here is (...)
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  40.  5
    Leo Strauss and Anglo-American Democracy: A Conservative Critique.Grant N. Havers - 2013 - DeKalb, Illinois: Northern Illinois University Press.
    In this original new study, Grant Havers critically interprets Leo Strauss’s political philosophy from a conservative perspective. Most mainstream readers of Strauss have either condemned him from the Left as an extreme right-wing opponent of liberal democracy or celebrated him from the Right as a traditional defender of Western civilization. Rejecting both of these portrayals, Havers shifts the debate beyond the conventional parameters of our age. He persuasively shows that Strauss was neither a man of the Far Right nor a (...)
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  41.  7
    Genetics and the Law.Aubrey Milunsky, George J. Annas, National Genetics Foundation & American Society of Law and Medicine - 2012 - Springer.
    Society has historically not taken a benign view of genetic disease. The laws permitting sterilization of the mentally re tarded~ and those proscribing consanguineous marriages are but two examples. Indeed as far back as the 5th-10th centuries, B.C.E., consanguineous unions were outlawed (Leviticus XVIII, 6). Case law has traditionally tended toward the conservative. It is reactive rather than directive, exerting its influence only after an individual or group has sustained injury and brought suit. In contrast, state legislatures have not been (...)
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  42.  97
    J.S. Mill on Civilization and Barbarism.Michael Levin - 2004 - Frank Cass.
    John Stuart Mill's best-known work is On Liberty. In it he declared that Western society was in danger of coming to a standstill. This was an extraordinarily pessimistic claim in view of Britain's global dominance at the time and one that has been insufficiently investigated in the secondary literature. The wanting model was that of China, a once advanced civilization that had apparently ossified. To understand how Mill came to this conclusion requires one to investigate his notion of the stages (...)
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  43. Islamfiche Readings From Primary Sources.William A. Graham, Miryam Rozen, Marilyn Robinson Waldman & American Council of Learned Societies - 1983 - Inter Documentation Clearwater Distributor].
     
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  44.  20
    Speech Imperialization? Situating American Parrhesia in an Isegoria World.Harrison Michael Rosenthal - 2020 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (2):1-21.
    This article explores the ideological origins of the American free-speech tradition. It analyzes the two principal categorizations of free speech in classical antiquity: isegoria, the right to voice one’s opinion, and parrhesia, the license to say what one pleases often through provocative discourse, thus grounding modern free-speech epistemology and jurisprudential philosophy in a sociohistorical context. Part 1 reviews the First Amendment corpus juris. A progression of incrementally absolute judicial holdings promotes parrhesia, highlighting democratic utility over individual self-actualization; thus, Americans (...)
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  45.  19
    Positive & Negative Liberties in Three Dimensions.Ronald Reagan - unknown
    It is only those who do not understand our people, who believe our national life is entirely absorbed by material motives. We make no concealment of the fact that we want wealth, but there are many other things we want much more. We want peace and honor, and that charity which is so strong an element of all civilization. The chief ideal of the American people is idealism. I cannot repeat too often that America is a nation of idealists.
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  46. Civil Liberties in a Lockdown: The Case of COVID-19.Samuel Director & Christopher Freiman - 2023 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 1 (6):1-24.
    In response to the spread of COVID-19, governments across the world have, with very few exceptions, enacted sweeping restrictive lockdown policies that impede citizens’ freedom to move, work, and assemble. This paper critically responds to the central arguments for restrictive lockdown legislation. We build our critique on the following assumption: public policy that enjoys virtually unanimous support worldwide should be justified by uncontroversial moral principles. We argue that that the virtually unanimous support in favor of restrictive lockdowns is not adequately (...)
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  47.  3
    Towards the light: the story of the struggles for liberty and rights that made the modern West.A. C. Grayling - 2007 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    In Towards the Light, A.C. Grayling tells the story of the long and difficult battle for freedom in the West, from the Reformation to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, from the battle for the vote to the struggle for the right to freedom of conscience. As Grayling passionately affirms, it is a story - and a struggle - that continues to this day as those in power use the threat of terrorism in the 21st century to roll-back the (...) that so many have fought and died to win for us. Including an appendix of landmark documents, including the British and American Bills of Rights and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, the Bloomsbury Revelations edition also includes a new preface by the author reflecting on developments since the book's original publication. (shrink)
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  48.  2
    American underdog: historic outsider upset: ethics and economics matter in Washington, DC.David Alan Brat - 2016 - New York: Center Street.
    From David Brat, the college professor who made political headlines when he unseated Majority Leader Eric Cantor, comes his plan for restoring fiscal liberty for America. Congressman David Brat's odds-defying win against Eric Cantor--a triumph of a modest $200,000 campaign fund against a $5 million war chest--immediately brought David Brat, heretofore a liberal arts college economics professor, into the political limelight. Now, in his first book, AMERICAN UNDERDOG, Brat examines how we brought down the status quo by tapping into (...)
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  49.  2
    Can Captain America Help Us Achieve Greater Unity and Civility?Mark D. White - 2014 - In The Virtues of Captain America. Oxford: Wiley. pp. 178–197.
    This chapter argues that while we are polarized on narrowly defined issues, we agree on more basic principles, ideals, and goals‐which don't get as much attention in the media compared to arguments over how we should pursue them. Captain America not only defended justice, equality, and liberty to the Red Skull, but has represented them as the core ideals of the United States of America. Refocusing our attention on these ideals, remembering our common points while debating differences, is the first (...)
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  50.  37
    From Post-Communism to Civil Society: The Reemergence of History and the Decline of the Western Model.John Gray - 1993 - Social Philosophy and Policy 10 (2):26-50.
    For virtually all the major schools of Western opinion, the collapse of the Communist regimes in Eastern Europe and in the Soviet Union, between 1989 and 1991, represents a triumph of Western values, ideas, and institutions. If, for triumphal conservatives, the events of late 1989 encompassed an endorsement of “democratic capitalism” that augured “the end of history,” for liberal and social democrats they could be understood as the repudiation by the peoples of the former Soviet bloc of Marxism-Leninism in (...)
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