Paine's Common Sense And Thomas Jefferson Declaration Of Independence Essay

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    early history of America. The effects of this Revolution remain evident when people examine the everyday life of modern day Americans. The American people continue to be free from monarchical reign, the Declaration of Independence continues to serve as principles which are to be upheld, and the common people live day to day in search of natural rights such as “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness”. However, in order gain the liberation Americans now possess many historical events had to…

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    prior needed to unify the colonists and did so by painting the Britain as a parasite, sucking on the blood of its young. Two writers in particular did this, Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson. Thomas Paine wrote his pamphlet “Common Sense” in an attempt to convince any loyalists or indifferents that the revolution was effectively ‘common sense’ and that regardless of social class, gender and even race, that rebelling was the smartest choice. In order to do so, Paine made abundant, almost…

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    For several decades, since the colonial times, there have been signs of Americanism that has resulted into what is now the modern America of today’s society. The differentiations and obvious similarities between the “old world” and the “new world”, Puritans and our “Founding Fathers”, and Puritan ideology versus Enlightenment ideology have all played an exciting role in what it means to be an American. The subjects of religion, the concept of God, freedom, and the equal rights of man ties into…

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    republic. Geography underscored those tensions by creating literal and figurative divisions among the newly formed American people. The ideology of independence and the continental geography shaped the Early American identity by paradoxically unifying and dividing the American people, creating a fluid, adaptable national identity. Despite seeking independence from England, Americans did not find freedom from European influence in the creation of their ideology, creating a paradoxical…

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    The Enlightenment is often defined as a cultural, intellectual, and philosophical movement in the eighteenth century that brought forth new ideas, many of which proved to be political. The Social Contract, written by Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, addresses the concern of the amount of power that a state holds over an individual. Popular sovereignty is an Enlightenment idea that stems from the Social Contract by claiming that political power is…

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    natural human rights and freedom. Bancroft’s notions parallel with Thomas Paine’s argument in Common Sense published in 1776, in which he says that the colonies were fighting for human rights, not just British rights. Paine suggests that the fight for independence was for the ideal of freedom and liberty. People gain their rights by birth, not by service to a government. The Declaration of Independence epitomizes this argument in Thomas Jefferson’s words; every man has “certain unalienable…

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    The movement for independence arose in the colonies as a desperate and defensive strategy to grab the reins of a young nation. The United States of America is not only improving the growth of democracy but also in its economic prosperity and the immensity of its later impact on the course of world history. Nations come into being in many ways, but this prosperous nation emerged from Thirteen little, fortunate colonies. That birth included civil strife, acts of heroism, acts of treachery, class…

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    Instantaneously ignited by the ‘Shot Heard ‘Round the World,’ the War of Independence was waged in the American determination of gaining freedom from its overpowering mother country. Several factors contributed to the outbreak of the Revolutionary War. Most prominently, the major contribution to the war originated from Great Britain spending a surplus of money and resources on the French and Indian War. Resultantly, taxes were enforced upon the people of the colonies in an array of different…

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    Bacon's " Declaration of the people" showed a mixture of resentment against the rich as well as frontier hatred of the Indians a. It showed that the Berkeley administration for unjust taxes, favorites in high position because of the beaver trade and not protecting the west former from the…

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    was working towards this goal: Thomas Paine’s Common Sense, published in 1776, evoked Americans’ attention because of the religious content. Although Thomas Paine admitted in his pamphlet The Age of Reason his atheistic worldview, he “had an intuitive grasp of religious appeals that would move his American audience to political action” (Heyrman). This indicates that even in 1776, religious education was important. God already had what He wanted, although Thomas Paine’s case indicates that it did…

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