首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Thomas Jefferson, who died in 1826, looms ever larger as a figure of special significance. Americans, of course, are familiar wi
Thomas Jefferson, who died in 1826, looms ever larger as a figure of special significance. Americans, of course, are familiar wi
admin
2010-04-28
41
问题
Thomas Jefferson, who died in 1826, looms ever larger as a figure of special significance. Americans, of course, are familiar with Jefferson as an early statesman, author of the Declaration of Independence, and a high-ranking presidential Founding Father. But there is another Jefferson less well known. This is the Jefferson who, as the outstanding American philosopher of democracy, has an increasing appeal to the world’ s newly emerging peoples.
There is no other man in history who formulated the ideas of democracy with such fullness, persuasive ness, and logic. Those interested in democracy as a poetical philosophy and system--even those who do not accept his postulates or are critical of his solutions--must reckon with his thought.
What, then, is his thought, and how much of it is still relevant under modem conditions?
Of all the ideas and beliefs that make up the political philosophy known as Jefferson democracy, perhaps three are paramount. These are the idea of equality, the idea of freedom, and the idea of the people’ s control over government. Underlying the whole, and serving as a major premise, is confidence in man.
To Jefferson, it was virtually axiomatic that the human being was essentially good, that he was capable of constant improvement through education and reason. He believed that "no definite limit could be assigned" to man’ s continued progress from ignorance and superstition to enlightenment and happiness. Unless this kept in mind, Jefferson cannot be understood properly.
What did he mean by the concept of equality, which he stated as a "self-evident" troth? Obviously, he was not foolish enough to believe that all men are equal in size or intelligence or talents or moral development. He never said that men are equal, but only that they come into the world with "equal rights". He believed that equality was a political rather than a biological or psychological or economic conception. It was a gift that man acquired automatically by coming into the world as a member of the human community.
Intertwined with equality was the concept of freedom, also viewed by Jefferson as a "natural right." In the Declaration of Independence he stated it as "self-evident" that liberty was one of the "inherent" and "unalienable rights" with which the Creator endowed man. "Freedom", he summed up at one time, "is the gift of Nature."
What did Jefferson mean by freedom and why was it necessary for him to claim it as an "inherent" or "natural" right? In Jefferson thought there are two main elements in the idea of freedom. There is, first, man’ s liberty to organize his own political institutions and to select periodically the individuals to run them. The other freedom is personal. Foremost in the area of individual liberty, Jefferson believed, was the untrammeled right to say, think, write, and believe whatever the citizen wishes -- provided, of course, he does not directly injure his neighbors.
It is because political and personal freedom are potentially in conflict that Jefferson, in order to make both secure, felt the need to found them on "natural fight". If each liberty derives from an "inherent" right, then neither could justly undermine the other. Experience of the past, when governments, were neither too strong for the ruled or too weak to rule them, convinced Jefferson of the desirability of establishing a delicate natural balance between political power and personal rights.
This brings us to the third basic element in the Jeffersonian idea: the people’ s control over government. It is paradoxical that Jefferson, who spent most of his adult years in politics, had an ingrained distrust of government as such. For the then-existing governments of Europe, virtually all of them hereditary monarchies, he had antipathy mixed with contempt. His mistrust of strong and unchecked government was inveterate. "I am not," he said, "a friend to a very energetic government. It is always oppressive."
Government being a necessity for civilized existence; the question was how it could be prevented from following its tendency to swallow the rights of the people. Jefferson’ s answer to this ancient dilemma was at variance with much traditional thinking. He began with the postulate that government existed for the people, and not vice versa; that it had no independent being except as an instrument of the people; and that it had no legitimate justifications for existence except to serve the people.
From this it followed, in Jefferson’ s view that only the people, and not their rulers or the privileged classes, could and should be relied upon as the "safe depositories" of political liberty. This key idea in the Jeffersonian political universe rested on the monumental assumption that the people at large had the wisdom, the capability, and the knowledge exclusively to carry the burden of political power and responsibility. The assumption was, of course, widely challenged and vigorously denied in Jefferson’ s day, but he always asserted his confidence init.
Confidence in the people, however, was not enough, by itself, to serve as a safeguard against the potential dangers inherent in political power. The people might become corrupted or demoralized or indifferent. Jefferson believed that the best practice for the avoidance of tyranny and the preservation of freedom was to follow two main policies. One was designed to limit power, and the other to control power.
In order to put limits on power, Jefferson felt, it was best to divide it by scattering its functions among as many entities as possible -- among states, countries, and municipalities. In order to keep it in check, it was to be impartially balanced among legislative, executive, and judicial branches. Thus, no group, agency, or entity would be able legitimately to acquire power for abuse. This is, of course, the theory that is embedded in the Constitution and that underlies the American federal system with its "check and balance".
For the control of power or, more specifically, the governmental apparatus itself, other devices had to be brought into play. Of these, two are of special importance: suffrage and elections.
Unlike many contemporaries, Jefferson believed in virtually universal suffrage. His opinion was that the universal right to vote was the only "rational and peaceable instrument" of free government.
Next to the right to vote, the system of free elections was the foremost instrument for control over government. This involved, first, the election by the people of practically all high government officials, and, secondly, fixed and regular periods of polling, established by law.
To make doubly sure that this mechanism would work as an effective control over power, Jefferson advocated frequent elections and short terms of office, so that the citizens would be enabled to express their "approbation or rejection" as soon as possible.
This, in substance, is the Jeffersonian philosophy--faith in the idea of equality, of freedom, and in the right to and need for popular control over government.
What, in all this, is relevant to peoples without a democratic tradition, especially those who have recently emerged in Asia and Africa? The rejection of democratic procedures by some of these peoples has been disheartening to believers in freedom and democracy. But it is noteworthy that democratic and parliamentary government has been displaced in areas where the people had no background in freedom or self-rule, and where illiteracy is generally high. Even there it is significant that the new dictatorships are usually proclaimed in the name of the people.
The Jeffersonian assumption that men crave equality and freedom has not been denied by events. Special conditions and traditions may explain non-democratic political methods for the achievement of certain purposes, but these remain unstable wherever the notion of liberty has begun to gain ground. "The disease of liberty", Jefferson said, "is catching."
The proof of this is to be found even in such societies as the Spanish and the Islamic, with their ancient traditions of chieftainships where popular eruptions against dictatorial rule have had an almost tidal constancy.
But it is a slow process, as Jefferson well knew, "The ground of liberty", he said, "is to be gained by inches; we must be contented to secure what we can get, from time to time, and eternally press forward for what is yet to get. It takes time to persuade men to do even what is for their own good."
Does Jefferson survive? Indeed he does.
What are the three most paramount ideas in Jeffersonian democracy?
选项
A、Equality, freedom and people’ s control over government.
B、Equality, confidence in man and people’ s control over government.
C、Equality, freedom and confidence in man.
D、Freedom, confidence in man and people’ s control over government.
答案
A
解析
第四段perhaps three are paramount,These are the idea of equality, the idea of freedom, and the idea of the people’s control over government为此问题提供答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/f5qO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
A、Shehadtoflyonthefollowingday.B、Shewasluckyenoughtohaveanunoccupiedseat.C、Shepaidextramoneyforherflight.
Travelingthroughthecountryacoupleofweeksagoonbusiness,IwaslisteningtothetalkofthelateUKwriterDouglasAdams
A、SinceI’veboughtaPSP,Ican’taffordtogototheconcert.B、MyPSPisworthmorethanaticketfortheconcert.C、Idon’t
Tea-takingisavery【B1】______customandvery【B2】______thing.Locatedin【B3】______London,theRitzhotelisespeciallywellkno
HungerandfoodinsecurityhavebeencalledAmerica’s"hiddencrisis."Atthesametime,andapparentlyparadoxically,obesity
Ifyou’relikemostmiddle-classparents,you’veprobablygottenannoyedwithyourdaughterforconstantlycheckingherInstagra
A、Therewasn’tanon-smokingsign.B、Thereweren’tanycleantowels.C、Thebedhadn’tbeenmadeup.D、Afullashtrayhadbeenle
Imagineyoufoundoutthatideasinventedbyacomputerwereratedhigherbyindependentexpertsthanideascreatedbyagroupo
A、manners.B、talkativeness.C、height.D、jewelry.D受害者最为详细地叙述了女匪所戴的装饰品,对其佩戴的pendant的质地(gold)、形状(strangeshape)等作了描述。
我轻轻地扣着板门,刚才那个小姑娘出来开了门,抬头看了我,先愣了一下,后来就微笑了,招手叫我进去。这屋子很小很黑,靠墙的铺板上,她的妈妈闭着眼平躺着,大约是睡着了,被头上有斑斑的的血痕,她的脸向里侧着,月看见她脸上的乱发,和脑后的一个大髻。门边一个小炭炉,上
随机试题
下图所示梁可能的破坏机构是()
女性,52岁,发现右乳外上象限肿块3个月,约3cm×2.5cm大小,同侧腋窝触及肿大、质硬淋巴结,全身情况良好为确诊肿块性质最好采用
关于急性胰腺炎患者的护理措施哪项不正确
患者,男,30岁。腹泻、脓血便4周,4~5次/天,伴下腹阵痛,便后缓解。首选的治疗药物为
同一区域中,不同利用类型的土地,有不同的基准地价标准。()
常用的均压防火技术措施有()。
落叶乔木在非适宜季节移植应采取的技术措施包括()等。
当物价不断上涨时,名义利率比实际利率()。
给定资料1.“中国领导层为明年确立了经济发展蓝图,强调直面长期问题,他们意识到靠借债和投资已无法驱动世界第二大经济体。”2015年12月,中央经济工作会议闭幕后,美国《华尔街日报》作出这样的评价。投资、出口等传统引擎“扭力”在减弱,驱动
Inthebeginningofthepassage,theauthortellsusthat______.Whatisthemainproblemthatpuzzlesthereadersofthenove
最新回复
(
0
)