The Scottish Invention of America, Democracy and Human Rights: A History of Liberty and Freedom from the Ancient Celts to the New MillenniumUniversity Press of America, 2004 - 434 pages The Scottish Invention of America, Democracy and Human Rights is a history of liberty from 1300 BC to 2004 AD. The book traces the history of the philosophy and fight for freedom from the ancient Celts to the creation of America, asserting the roots of liberty originated in the radical political thought of the ancient Celts, the Scots' struggle for freedom, John Duns Scotus and the Arbroath Declaration (1320), a tradition that influenced Locke and the English Whig theorists as well as our Founding Fathers, particularly Jefferson, Madison, Wilson and Witherspoon. Author Alexander Klieforth argues the Arbroath Declaration (1320) and its philosophy was the intellectual foundation of the American Revolution and Declaration of Independence (1776). Thus, the work is a revolutionary alternative to the traditional Anglocentric view that freedom, democracy and human rights descended only from John Locke and England of the 1600s. The work is the first historical analysis to locate and document the origin of the doctrine of the "consent of the governed" in the medieval scholar, John Duns Scotus (c.1290s), four centuries before Locke and the English Whigs, and in the evolutionary progress of mankind. The work contends that the Arbroath Declaration (1320) and its philosophy was the intellectual foundation of the American Revolution and Declaration of Independence (1776). After showing the Scottish influence on the U.S. Constitution, Bill of Rights, and the new Federal government, the Braudelian-style work traces the development of Scottish-style freedom and human rights through the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen influenced by Jefferson, Lincoln's Gettysburg Address that transformed Jefferson's Declaration, and Eleanor Roosevelt's role in creating the U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the foundation of the modern human rights struggle. More information about this book is available at the authors website www.braveheartsoul.com. |
Table des matières
Chapter 1 Ceud Mille Failte | 1 |
Genesis | 5 |
The Celts The People Who Disappeared Into the Shadows | 13 |
The Blossoming of Celtic Culture | 25 |
The Thistle Takes Root Celtic Scotland | 37 |
Vent Vidi Sed Non Vici | 51 |
The Four Founding Peoples and Their Kingdoms | 61 |
The Celts and Supernatural Life | 79 |
The Scottish Mind of Thomas Jefferson | 241 |
The Drafting of the Declaration of Independence | 245 |
THE TEXT OF THE FIRST PRINTING OF THE DECLARATION OF | 251 |
An Analysis of the Style and Logic of the American Declaration | 255 |
A Comparison of the Arbroath Declaration 1320 and the Declaration of Independence 1776 | 263 |
The Scottish Influence on the Constitution the Bill of Rights and the New Federal Government | 269 |
THE TEXT OF THE AMERICAn BILL OF RIGHTS | 276 |
The Controversy The Comparative Influences of the CelticArbroath Philosophy and Scottish Enlightenment Versus English Philosophy and Law on t... | 279 |
The Scandinavians | 95 |
The Forging of a New Nation | 107 |
The Normans | 117 |
The House of Canmore | 133 |
The Fall of the House of Canmore | 145 |
He Who Sows the Wind | 155 |
Shall Reap the Whirlwind | 165 |
Robert the Bruce | 171 |
Medieval Scotland and John Duns Scotus | 177 |
The Declaration of Arbroath | 185 |
THE TEXT OF THE DECLARATION OF ARBROATH IN ENGLISH An English Translation of the original Latin text | 190 |
THE TEXT OF THE DECLARATION OF ARBROATH IN MEDIEVAL LATIN | 194 |
From the Arbroath Declaration to the Scottish Enlightenment | 197 |
The Scottish Enlightenment | 213 |
The Scottish Invention of AmericaThomas Jefferson the Arbroath Declaration and the Declaration of Independence | 227 |
The Scottish Enlightenment in the United States | 229 |
The Age of the Rights of Mankind How the Declaration of 1776 Carried WorldWide the Ideology of 1320 to the New Millennium | 293 |
The Declaration of Independence the French Revolution and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen | 297 |
Abraham Lincolns Transformation of the Declaration of Independence from Freedom and Liberty to Equality | 299 |
THE TEXT OF THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS | 301 |
The Ideology of 1320 and 1776 and the Global Independence and Human Rights Movements | 303 |
The Scots American and French Declarations and the Third World | 309 |
And We Return to Scotland and England The Scottish Parliament | 311 |
209 Years Later the English the Scots and the Welsh Get an AmericanStyle Bill of Rights | 317 |
Conclusions and the Future | 319 |
American Events | 323 |
End notes | 374 |
Bibliography Further Reading | 401 |
429 | |
About the Authors | |
Expressions et termes fréquents
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