America's path.The Pursuit of Happiness in Times of War by Carl M. Cannon (Rowman & Littlefield, 318 pp., $24.95) In this exceptionally friendly book, journalist Carl Cannon explores what the word "Happiness" means in the famous phrase, "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness," found in the Declaration of Independence. Much of the conceptual power of this phrase derives from its linkage of the three: Life is necessary to liberty, and liberty to the pursuit of happiness. Cannon examines the sources of these words, deep in the traditions of Enlightenment political reflection, and the ways they have reverberated in American history since 1776, used by warriors and presidents, including Washington at Valley Forge Valley Forge, on the Schuylkill River, SE Pa., NW of Philadelphia. There, during the American Revolution, the main camp of the Continental Army was established (Dec., 1777–June, 1778) under the command of Gen. George Washington. . The Confederates, Cannon notes, could make slavery compatible with it only by deeming slaves partially "men," and of course Lincoln answered this in his Gettysburg Address Gettysburg Address, speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln on Nov. 19, 1863, at the dedication of the national cemetery on the Civil War battlefield of Gettysburg, Pa. It is one of the most famous and most quoted of modern speeches. . George H. W. Bush adj. 1. Causing gladness and pleasure. 2. Eliciting sympathy and tender feelings: a heartwarming tale. Adj. 1. response to Cannon's inquiry, that he attained happiness through satisfaction in his family--thus reminding us that the word "happiness," for the Declaration, is a box to be filled in by the individual, its content not prescribed (as by Plato and much classical thought) as philosophical contemplation or (as by Christianity) as prayer and holiness. While giving Jefferson credit for the "magical phrase," Cannon shows its long prehistory prehistory, period of human evolution before writing was invented and records kept. The term was coined by Daniel Wilson in 1851. It is followed by protohistory, the period for which we have some records but must still rely largely on archaeological evidence to in Enlightenment political theory and the parallel documents of colonies, counties, and towns. In a felicitous fe·lic·i·tous adj. 1. Admirably suited; apt: a felicitous comparison. 2. Exhibiting an agreeably appropriate manner or style: a felicitous writer. 3. passage, Cannon says it more resembles the Mormon Tabernacle Choir The Mormon Tabernacle Choir is a large choir sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Since July 15, 1929, the choir has performed a weekly radio broadcast called Music and the Spoken Word than a string quartet: It reflects the mind of the new nation as a whole. Locke had spoken of life, liberty, and property--explaining that by property he meant the "natural rights of man" not given him by king or ruler--and of the State itself as the basis of a "social contract" between the governed and those who governed them. Prior to this social contract, man was in a mythical State of Nature. Many have asked, as need not be surprising, how a "natural right" as Locke posits it comports with the strict empiricism--sight, hearing, smell, touch, taste, however supplemented by instruments--of his Essay on Understanding. Where, amid his empirical facts, does Locke find a natural law? All or most men may say murder is wrong. But where is the law, as far as empiricism empiricism (ĕmpĭr`ĭsĭzəm) [Gr.,=experience], philosophical doctrine that all knowledge is derived from experience. For most empiricists, experience includes inner experience—reflection upon the mind and its is concerned? Cannon invokes Rousseau's Social Contract (1762) as another possible source, because of its emphasis on liberty: "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." Taken literally, this is nonsense: A new infant is especially dependent. Rousseau has to mean that man was free in the original State of Nature. Like Locke, he is an anti-Hobbesian: Where Hobbes saw man's life in the State of Nature as savage--"solitary, poor, nasty, brutish brut·ish adj. 1. Of or characteristic of a brute. 2. Crude in feeling or manner. 3. Sensual; carnal. 4. and short"--Rousseau sees mankind as "born free," without qualification. For him, some of man's "chains" are desirable: They are not Hobbes's powerful sovereign but the small deliberative de·lib·er·a·tive adj. 1. Assembled or organized for deliberation or debate: a deliberative legislature. 2. Characterized by or for use in deliberation or debate. entity ruled by its majority. Ideally, such self-government renders these "chains" legitimate--but all the actual monarchies of Rousseau's Europe illegitimate. Was Rousseau thus utopian? Burke and Johnson thought so. Not so fast, argued political theorist Willmoore Kendall: Burke and Johnson had not read Rousseau's recommendations in the 1772 treatise The Government of Poland--which are highly prudential. As much as Burke, perhaps, Rousseau depends in practice upon the particulars of time, place, and history to form a judgment of the possible; he stresses the likely loss inseparable from change. Rousseau, meet Burke. According to the Declaration, men are "created equal" with regard to those "unalienable UNALIENABLE. The state of a thing or right which cannot be sold. 2. Things which are not in commerce, as public roads, are in their nature unalienable. Rights" of "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness." But these rights are commonsensical and in the tradition of English law The system of law that has developed in England from approximately 1066 to the present. The body of English law includes legislation, Common Law, and a host of other legal norms established by Parliament, the Crown, and the judiciary. ; they are also, in an important way, contingent. The man condemned to the gallows GALLOWS. An erection on which to bang criminals condemned to death. has forfeited his right to life, the man in prison his liberty; the highwayman Highwayman, the loves an innkeeper’s daughter, who vainly tries to save him from capture. [Br. Poetry: Noyes “The Highwayman” ] See : Highwaymen cannot claim a right to the "pursuit of happiness." The Declaration leaves open the specific arrangements for implementing such rights under law. In the Constitution we have that form specified. Here contingency is foremost, and the term "rights" never appears. The first three words, "We the People," specify precisely where the foundation of legitimacy lies, and the republican form is set up that was promised in the Declaration's statement that government derives its "just Powers from the Consent of the Governed "Consent of the governed" is a political theory stating that a government's legitimacy and moral right to use state power is, or ought to be, derived from the people or society over which that power is exercised. ." The self-governing people, through a deliberative process--made deliberate by built-in delaying features--decides under what laws it agrees to live. The goals are specified by the six purposes listed in the Preamble, the effectuation of new rights not among them. This Constitution and the Declaration are a seamless cloth. But do the luminous words "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" express universal truths? If they are "self-evident" to human beings, then they must be universal. Cannon seems to believe they are. But such human rights certainly had not occurred to the Indians who are the subject of the 27th count of the indictment of George III--which follows the Preamble in the Declaration but is almost never read: "He has excited domestic Insurrections amongst us, and has endeavored to bring on the Inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. of our Frontiers the merciless Indian Savages, whose known Rule of Warfare is an undistinguished un·dis·tin·guished adj. 1. a. Marked by no peculiar quality; not distinguished; ordinary: an undistinguished appearance. b. Destruction of all Ages, Sexes, and Conditions." Since the Declaration asks for wide agreement, in America but especially in Paris, "multiculturalism" clearly was not yet a widespread superstition. But even apart from the "Indian savages," the "self-evident" truths were hardly self-evident to mankind in 1776. At best, we might argue that such truths were latent in those Indians, and also were latent outside Christian-Enlightenment Europe. Latent in, say, the Chinese or the Zulus? Would these people duly emerge from their conditions, given time? One might hope, I suppose. But Jefferson really seems to have had only Western civilization in mind, as when he wrote to Adams in 1821. Cannon quotes the letter: "I shall not die without a hope that light and liberty are on a steady advance. We have seen, indeed, once within the records of history a compleat eclipse of the human mind continuing for centuries. And this too by swarms of the same northern barbarians, conquering and taking possession of the countries and governments of the civilized world." The phrases I have italicized speak for themselves. As Alexander Pope had written in 1727: "How little, mark! That portion of the ball [world] / Where, faint at best, the beams of Science [knowledge] fall." But now we face a question. One notices today that the former English colonies--even Kenya--are doing much better those of Spain, Portugal, or even France, nations traditionally more authoritarian in religion and government, and communicating no tradition of self-government. In Heart of Darkness Heart of Darkness adventure tale of journey into heart of the Belgian Congo and into depths of man’s heart. [Br. Lit.: Heart of Darkness, Magill III, 447–449] See : Journey , and I do not wish to dislodge him from his esteem in the universities, Conrad attacks Belgian colonialism, not English. The great English ships going down the Thames and out to sea, he says, were "bearers of a spark from the sacred fire." How English is the Declaration-Constitution theory of government? How transferable outside the modern West? In most of the world, is free, representative government really latent, maybe "developing," to use a respectable word, like a photographic print in the acid bath (of Enlightenment)? Until 1945, Germany, a modern nation, had representative government only during brief and despised Weimar; Japan until 1945 never had it, but is now a successful imitator, as, curiously, in so much else. Both nations had to be smashed in 1945; both seem to have come forward well. Africa remains Africa; Latin America, backward. But the Arab world? Stagnant, humiliated hu·mil·i·ate tr.v. hu·mil·i·at·ed, hu·mil·i·at·ing, hu·mil·i·ates To lower the pride, dignity, or self-respect of. See Synonyms at degrade. , as lethal as a nest of vipers. Carl Cannon's book possesses the intellectual excitement that forces us to frame the crucial questions in Jefferson's terms, questions of high policy now, and of life and death. |
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