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TTC Audio - Cycles of American Political Thought

Posted By: ksenya.b
TTC Audio - Cycles of American Political Thought

TTC Audio - Cycles of American Political Thought
36 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture | MP3's @ 64 Kbps | ISBN-10: 1598032631 | Language: English | 500 MB
Genre: Philosophy & Intellectual History | Author: Joseph F. Kobylka | Course No. 4820

America is often described as a nation of doers. Its folk heroes are men and women of action, like Daniel Boone and Annie Oakley, who subdued an untamed wilderness on the way to forging a great nation. But is that the whole story? Is American history really just a tale of dynamic movers and shakers who left philosophizing to their European counterparts?

In Cycles of American Political Thought, you'll examine the often neglected philosophical underpinnings of this nation's history. With renowned political scientist Professor Joseph F. Kobylka as your guide, you'll explore how this nation of "doers" has, from its birth, been deeply engaged with the most fundamental questions of political philosophy.

1. America—The Philosophical Experiment
2. Historical Baggage
3. Theoretical Baggage
4. A Puritan Beginning
5. Expansion and Individualism
6. The Revolutionary Context
7. The Road to the Declaration of Independence
8. A "Natural" Revolutionary—Thomas Paine
9. The Unconscious Dialectic of Crèvecoeur
10. John Adams—"Constitutionalist"
11. A Political Constitution
12. A Philosophical Constitution—Faction
13. A Philosophical Constitution—Structure
14. A Philosophical Constitution—Interpretation
15. Disorganized Losers—The Anti-Federalists
16. The "Genius" of Thomas Jefferson
17. Jacksonian Democracy—The "People" Extended
18. Iconoclastic Individualism—Thoreau
19. Inclusionist Stirrings—Douglass and Stanton
20. The Organic Socialism of Brownson
21. American Feudalism—The Vision of Fitzhugh
22. Constitutionalizing the Slave Class
23. Lincoln's Reconstitution of America
24. Equality in the Law and in Practice
25. Social Darwinism and Economic Laissez-Faire
26. Looking Backward, Looking Forward
27. Teddy Roosevelt and Progressivism
28. Supreme Court and Laissez-Faire
29. The Women's Movement and the 19th Amendment
30. Eugene V. Debs and Working-Class Socialism
31. Hamiltonian Means for Jeffersonian Ends
32. FDR, the New Deal, and the Supreme Court
33. The Racial Revolution
34. The New Egalitarianism and Freedom
35. The Reagan Revolution
36. Cycles of American Political Conversations


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