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This Week's Suggested Book
from the Ashbrook Center

(Monday, March 01, 1999)
 

John Adams and the Spirit of Liberty

by C. Bradley Thompson

University Press of Kansas
352 pages, January 1998
Hardcover, 39.95
ISBN: 0700609156

order from amazon.com
A percentage of the proceeds from your purchase of this book from Amazon.com will benefit the
Ashbrook Center.

America's finest eighteenth-century student of political science, John Adams is also the least studied of the Revolution's key figures. By the time he became our second president, no American had written more about our government and not even Jefferson or Madison had read as widely about questions of human nature, natural right, political organization, and constitutional construction. Yet this staunch constitutionalist is perceived by many as having become reactionary in his later years and his ideas have been largely disregarded.

In the first major work on Adams's political thought in over thirty years, C. Bradley Thompson takes issue with the notion that Adams's thought is irrelevant to the development of American ideas. Focusing on Adams's major writings, Thompson elucidates and reevaluates his political and constitutional thought by interpreting it within the tradition of political philosophy stretching from Plato to Montesquieu.

This major revisionist study shows that the distinction Adams drew between "principles of liberty" and "principles of political architecture" is central to his political philosophy. Thompson first chronicles Adams's conceptualization of moral and political liberty during his confrontation with American Loyalists and British imperial officers over the true nature of justice and the British Constitution, illuminating Adams's two most important pre-Revolutionary essays, "A Dissertation on the canon and Feudal Law" and "The Letters of Novanglus." He then presents Adams's debate with French philosophers over the best form of government and provides an extended analysis of his Defence of the Constitutions of Government and Discourses on Davila to demonstrate his theory of political architecture.

From these pages emerges a new John Adams. In reexamining his political thought, Thompson reconstructs the contours and influences of Adams's mental universe, the ideas he challenged, the problems he considered central to constitution-making, and the methods of his reasoning. Skillfully blending history and political science, Thompson's work shows how the spirit of liberty animated Adams's life and reestablishes this forgotten Revolutionary as an independent and important thinker.


Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
 
Part One: Principles of Liberty
1. Calvin, Locke, and the American Enlightenment
2. Lawyer, Statesman, and Lawgiver
3. The Spirit of Liberty
4. The Principles of Liberty
 
Part Two: Principles of Political Architecture
5. A Guidebook for Lawgivers
6. The Science of Politics
7. The Science of History
8. The Science of Human Nature
9. Republican Government
10. The Principles of Government
11. The Art of Political Architecture
12. Posterity Must Judge
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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