登入
選單
返回
Google圖書搜尋
The Lovers' Quarrel
Elvin T. Lim
其他書名
The Two Foundings and American Political Development
出版
Oxford University Press
, 2014
主題
History / Europe / Renaissance
History / Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies)
History / Social History
Political Science / General
Political Science / History & Theory
Political Science / Constitutions
Political Science / American Government / General
ISBN
0199812187
9780199812189
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=zEuPAwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The United States has experienced Two Foundings, not one. The framers of the second Constitution, the Federalists, were not operating in an ideational or institutional vacuum; rather, the document they drafted and ratified was designed to remedy the perceived flaws of the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union. To decouple the Two Foundings is to appreciate that there is no "original meaning," only original dissent. Because, on the insistence of the Anti-Federalists, prior and democratically sanctioned understandings of federalism and union had to be negotiated and partially grafted onto the new Constitution, the Constitution's Articles and the Bill of Rights do not cohere as well together as have conventionally been understood. Rather, they represent two antithetical orientations toward power, liberty, and republicanism. The Anti-Federalist and Federalist altercation over the necessity of the Second Founding generated coherent and self-contained philosophies that would become the indigenous core of American political thought that has been reproduced and transmitted across two centuries. The Second Founding, or the "founding" we have come to know as the only one we had, would become a template for the unique species of politics and political debate that is prototypically American. American political development has occurred only after the political entrepreneurs of each generation locked horns in a Lovers' Quarrel about the relative priority of the principles of one of the Two Foundings, and succeeded in justifying and forging a durable expansion or contraction of federal authority.