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Topic: Conceived in Liberty


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 Welcome to Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness
"Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal." Lincoln's Gettysburg Address on November 19, 1863.
"Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
"I leave you, hoping that the lamp of liberty will burn in your bosoms until there shall no longer be a doubt that all men are created free and equal." The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln edited by Roy P. Basler, Volume II, "Speech at Chicago, Illinois" (July 10, 1858), p.
www.anthology-of-eternity.com /pursuit   (720 words)

  
 Liberty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Various political ideologies oppose themselves on the understanding of liberty, which can be conceived, in an individualist and liberal conception as the freedom of the individual, whilst socialism, for example, equates liberty with equality, claiming that liberty without equality amounts to the domination of the most powerful.
A temple was erected to the goddess Liberty on the Aventine Hill in Rome by the father of Tiberius Gracchus during the second Punic War.
Liberty is a concept of political philosophy or, as in Kant's philosophy, a metaphysical idea, often equated with freedom.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Liberty   (2194 words)

  
 Liberty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Various political ideologies oppose themselves on the understanding of liberty, which can be conceived, in an individualist and liberal conception as the freedom of the individual, whilst socialism, for example, equates liberty with equality, claiming that liberty without equality amounts to the domination of the most powerful.
A temple was erected to the goddess Liberty on the Aventine Hill in Rome by the father of Tiberius Gracchus during the second Punic War.
Liberty is a concept of political philosophy or, as in Kant's philosophy, a metaphysical idea, often equated with freedom.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Liberty   (2194 words)

  
 *Ø*  Wilson's Almanac free daily ezine )O( Statue of Liberty: Roman Goddess Libertas Bartholdi
It is believed that Bartholdi conceived the original statue as an effigy of the Egyptian goddess Isis, and only later converted it to a ‘Statue of Liberty’ for New York Harbor when it was rejected for the Suez Canal.
Malliard, an actress, was selected to personify the “Goddess of Liberty.” Being brought to Notre Dame, Paris, she was seated on the altar, and lighted a large candle to signify that Liberty was the “light of the world.” (See Louis Blanc: History, ii.
The poem, describing the Statue of Liberty, appears on a plaque at the base of the statue.
www.wilsonsalmanac.com /statue_of_liberty.html   (990 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited Politics Special Reports Negative v positive liberty
But negative liberty, at least as conceived by everyone from Thomas Hobbes to Berlin, serves to protect a minimum area of personal freedom from government, a private sphere beyond which the state should not trespass.
Berlin's work on liberty was written at the height of the cold war, and was meant to encourage greater intellectual honesty among the communist left, some of whom were tempted to justify restrictions on negative liberty in the countries of the Soviet bloc by claiming to speak on behalf of a higher kind of freedom.
When the chancellor hitches his policies to the idea of positive liberty, and implicitly suggests trading off the negative freedom to do nothing on the dole in favour of the positive freedom to work, his argument is debatable but robust.
politics.guardian.co.uk /homeaffairs/comment/0,11026,1669474,00.html   (574 words)

  
 LibertyGuide.com
Liberty Matters closes the gaps with grassroots communication, public relations campaigns and educational programs to further the grassroots property rightsandnbsp; movement in America.
Reason provides a refreshing alternative to right-wing and left-wing opinion magazines by making a principled case for liberty and individual choice in all areas of human activity.
This journal of libertarian essays attempts to provide an uncompromising moral and economic case for individual liberty, free markets, private property, and limited government.
www.theihs.org /libertyguide/links/links.php/12.html   (906 words)

  
 Addison Wesley Professional - Programming C#, 3rd Edition
Jesse Liberty's Programming C# provides an adept and extremely well conceived guide to the C# language and is written for the developer with some previous C++, Java, and/or Visual Basic experience.
Liberty's wide experience in computers and general writing skill shows, as he is able to draw on a wealth of examples to move his text forward.
Liberty is clearly one of those who just writes about it, and there doesn't seem to be a concept in.NET that is too trivial for him to take an extra couple pages talking about it in lieu of providing useful content.
safari.awprofessional.com /0596004893?a=102682   (1930 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Books: Liberty and Freedom: A Visual History of America's Founding Ideas
Liberty, he writes, is built on the idea of being free from restraint, with what we think of today as rights conceived of more as privileges, granted and protected by the state.
The seal of 1774 hasn't lasted; nor, for that matter, has the liberty cap, which was all the rage in the 18th century but is recognized today only by dutiful students of iconography.
Liberty and Freedom is devoted to those two concepts, which Fischer holds are key to understanding the culture of America.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0195162536?v=glance   (2159 words)

  
 Rothbard, Life and Times
Conceived in Liberty was being published, Kansas entrepreneur Charles Koch arranged financial support so that Rothbard could take a year off from teaching to write a book presenting his political philosophy.
The New Left turned out to be far more interested in power than they ever were in liberty, and neither private property nor toleration were ever part of their creed.
New York Times published Rothbard’s op-ed article, “The New Libertarian Creed,” which reported on the increasing numbers of young people who embraced individualism and liberty.
www.libertystory.net /LSTHINKROTHBARDLIFE.htm   (2159 words)

  
 Moral hazard and negative liberty (Signifying Nothing: Tell 'em about it, Joe-Joe!)
However, I think that among the best argument for robust negative or liberty rights, i.e., for institutionalized constraints on coercion, is that a reliable system of negative rights over time creates more abilities, opens more paths of feasible possibility for individual lives, than most alternative systems of rights.
However, political systems built around positive rights tend toward sclerosis, thereby reducing rates of economic growth, and a high rate of economic growth, along with (negative) liberty and stability, is part of the trinity of primary political goods (says me).
Furthermore, a system of positive rights, conceived as a system of guarantees, is often self-defeating, because it cannot overcome systemic moral hazard problems that, independently of growth problems, turn out foreclose many of the possibilities for life that the system of guarantees was meant to open.
blog.lordsutch.com /?entryid=2170   (373 words)

  
 CWN Book Reviews
Because her arguments on liberty are well conceived, Etcheson’s Bleeding Kansas should take its place next to Alice Nichols’s Bleeding Kansas, James A. Rowley’s Race and Politics, Gunja SenGupta’s For God and Mammon and other standards on this era.
To Northerners, liberty was always tied to a right to decide the form of political and cultural institutions at the ballot box, essentially deciding one’s own future.
Etcheson argues that the violence in Kansas and its emphasis on liberty spreads directly from the Plains and causes the events leading to the Civil War.
www.civilwarnews.com /reviews/bookreviews.cfm?ID=654   (597 words)

  
 Liberty Place, Prairie du Chein, Wisconsin
Liberty Place was conceived as part of a community development effort to meet housing needs in areas served by Wisconsin Power and Light.
Liberty Place is within walking distance of both the town center and other places of employment where residents might work.
Residents of Liberty Place have the advantage of living in a small town where almost all facilities and activities are within walking distance of their home.
www.heartland-properties.com /news/liberty.html   (597 words)

  
 The Statue of Liberty - New York City
The Statue of Liberty was a gift to the United States from the people of France, conceived and designed as a monument to a great international friendship.
On October 28, 1886 President Grover Cleveland accepted The Statue on behalf of the United States and said in part: "we will not forget that liberty here made her home; nor shall her chosen altar be neglected".
But its significance has broadened and for many people throughout the world it has become the recognized symbol of liberty.
www.si-web.com /Statue.html   (597 words)

  
 Statue of Liberty - Paper Cutouts by PaperToys.com
The idea for 'Liberty Enlightening the World' was conceived in France; it was designed by the French sculptor Bartholdi, and shipped to New York to be assembled and dedicated in 1886.
The Statue of Liberty is a representation of a woman holding aloft a torch, which stands at the entrance to New York Harbor.
The statue is 152 ft high (40 m).
papertoys.com /statue.htm   (612 words)

  
 Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island -- Are We There Yet?
Transportation to Liberty Island is via Circle Line ferry, which departs on a regular schedule both from Battery Park in New York and Liberty State Park in New Jersey.
The ferry is the only fee incurred in visiting the Statue of Liberty or Ellis Island, aside from food and souvenirs.
Needing no introduction, the Statue of Liberty has for decades been one of the nation's leading attractions.
www.fieldtrip.com /ny/23637620.htm   (531 words)

  
 The Statue of Liberty - New York City
The Statue of Liberty was a gift to the United States from the people of France, conceived and designed as a monument to a great international friendship.
On October 28, 1886 President Grover Cleveland accepted The Statue on behalf of the United States and said in part: "we will not forget that liberty here made her home; nor shall her chosen altar be neglected".
Winds of 50 miles per hour cause the Statue to sway 3 inches (7.62 cm) and the torch to sway 5 inches (12.7 cm).
www.si-web.com /Statue.html   (334 words)

  
 statue of liberty
Even then, liberty was precarious, and the republicans knew the concept would have to be burned into the national consciousness with a powerful image.
He knew that a strongsymbol of liberty was too inflammatory to be tolerated by the emperor within the boundaries of France.
The Colossal figure of a woman striding with uplifted flame across the entrance to the new World is a symbol of America to most people, but she was conceived as an expression of French republican ideals.
snihur.iatp.by /table3a.htm   (334 words)

  
 GORP - Statue of Liberty National Monument, New York City
The Statue of Liberty National Monument is one of the abiding images of America.
He knew that a strong symbol of liberty was too inflammatory to be tolerated by the emperor within the boundaries of France.
Aware of how potent a symbol the human embodiment of liberty could be, as in the painting by Eugene Delacroix of Liberty Leading the People, Laboulaye discussed his idea with one of his dinner guests, sculptor Auguste Bartholdi Bartholdi traveled to America in 1871 to propose the monument and choose a site.
www.millville.org /Workshops_f/Simon_statlib/whacked/ny_liber.htm   (959 words)

  
 NPS Historical Handbook: Statue of Liberty
THE STATUE OF LIBERTY ENLIGHTENING THE WORLD was conceived and designed as a symbol of a great international friendship.
The tablet in the statue's left hand, inscribed July 4, 1776, refers to the Declaration of Independence—telling all comers of the American ideal that "all men are created equal." The torch, held high in her right hand, hardly needs explanation as she lights the way to freedom and liberty.
The broken shackles of tyranny that are molded at the feet of Liberty spoke for themselves to generations of people fleeing tyranny.
www.cr.nps.gov /history/online_books/hh/11/hh11a.htm   (368 words)

  
 Statue of Liberty Enlightening the World
Nevertheless, its deep significance is understood through-out this entire "nation conceived in liberty." The towering statue has a profound symbolic meaning for every American soldier and sailor going forth from the port of New York to defend his own and his country's liberty.
Today, when the forces of liberty are struggling once more against the forces of oppression, it seems fitting to consider some of the motives underlying the creation of the greatest of all symbols of human freedom--the Statue of Liberty.
The Statue of Liberty was inaugurated eleven years after the French began to raise funds for the sculpture; and the American campaign for money to build the pedestal lasted about nine years.
www.endex.com /gf/buildings/liberty/nytc/solnytc1943.htm   (6608 words)

  
 LibertyGuide.com
The New America Foundation is an independent, nonpartisan, nonprofit public policy institute that was conceived through the collaborative work of a diverse and intergenerational group of public intellectuals, civic leaders, and business executives.
This student-oriented group provides a meeting place for students and young people to organize in groups and participate in creative forms of pro-liberty activism.
The Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI) is a non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt educational organization whose purpose is to convey to successive generations of college youth a better understanding of the values and institutions that sustain a free society.
www.theihs.org /libertyguide/links/links.php?id=5&print=1   (1257 words)

  
 PetersNet: William Edmund Fahey, Man's Sanctuary: The Development Of Conscience And Liberty
Although the Greeks conceived democracy and granted liberty to certain members of the ancient city — and clearly understood the importance of moral virtue — they grounded their political freedom in tenuous entities such as a civic constitution, rather than in shared religious beliefs.
When stripped of religion, democracy — or any other form of government — will undermine man's individual judgment, because a society without a religious underpinning will become confused as to what conscience is, and what it means freely and properly to exercise one's conscience.
As a religion, Christianity obviously taught virtue, but unlike the religions of antiquity it did not locate ultimate truth in rituals, but in the development of the individual conscience, in creeds.
www.petersnet.net /browse/4437.htm   (2423 words)

  
 Barry Goldwater Remembered
“Barry Goldwater served America, all of America, a country conceived in liberty, a country that let you pledge any damn thing you wanted as long as it didn’t cost someone else their liberty,” said Sen. John McCain, who replaced Goldwater in the Senate.
"Barry Goldwater served America, all of America, a country conceived in liberty, a country that let you pledge any damn thing you wanted as long as it didn’t cost someone else their liberty."
Goldwater’s public funeral culminated a two-day tribute that drew lines of mourners to the downtown Phoenix church where he was baptized.
silkscape.com /SMA/agh2ofun.htm   (1061 words)

  
 Africans in America/Part 4/Eric Foner on the role of westward expansion
Americans in the 19th century thought of or spoke of their country as in Jefferson phrase -- an "empire of liberty." And the history of the United States was conceived of as part of the progress of mankind and the spread of liberty throughout the world.
In other words, people would talk about the expansion of the "empire of liberty" and never quite mention that millions of people in this "empire of liberty" were slaves.
The westward expansion of slavery was one of the most dynamic economic and social processes going on in this country.
www.pbs.org /wgbh/aia/part4/4i3099.html   (1061 words)

  
 AEI - Events
We will only succeed in building a more harmonious world order, Novak argues, if we embrace the fundamental role of human liberty—as conceived by our Judeo-Christian founding fathers—in bringing about historical change.
In The Universal Hunger for Liberty (Basic Books, 2004), Michael Novak sets forth a new model for facing this very challenge—and for healing a still violently fractured world.
Can we also find grounds in Islam for political, economic, and religious liberty—and thereby ensure a safe future for people in all corners of the globe?
www.aei.org /events/eventID.889/event_detail.asp   (135 words)

  
 CMA Exhibition Feature : Jean-François Millet
Liberty
Like Millet's image, Doré's was conceived during a moment when questions of liberty were made crucial because of civil unrest and reprisal (the 1870-71 Franco-Prussian War and ensuing Paris Commune).
Millet did not win the competition and his painted Republic no longer exists, but this representation of a related concept- Liberty- was inspired by his contest participation.
Liberty relates to Jean-François Millet's entrance into the 1848 competition for an official painted figure representing the second French Republic.
www.clevelandart.org /exhibcef/butkin/html/1077198.html   (135 words)

  
 Rothbard, Life and Times
Conceived in Liberty was being published, Kansas entrepreneur Charles Koch arranged financial support so that Rothbard could take a year off from teaching to write a book presenting his political philosophy.
In this work, Rothbard emphasized “the great conflict which is eternally waged between Liberty and Power, a conflict, by the way, which was seen with crystal clarity by the American revolutionaries of the eighteenth century.
How to explain the all the pamphlets and newspapers articles and newspaper articles written about liberty?
www.libertystory.net /LSTHINKROTHBARDLIFE.htm   (9860 words)

  
 The majority not always right: Most scientists see global warming, but it's just a show of hands
For those of you unfamiliar with the Conceived in Liberty events, they are organized irregularly by Edmontonians Matthew Johnston and Bruce Armstrong.
Consider this line from the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence “whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends [life,.liberty and the pursuit of happiness], it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it.
Jefferson uttered that famous anti-government quotation, one of his best known quotations, “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
www.fathersforlife.org /articles/gunter/liberty.htm   (2608 words)

  
 How Lockean Was the American Revolution? -- Objectivist Center -- Reason, Individualism, Achievement, and Freedom
Hence was born the "republican paradigm." Where Locke was preoccupied with personal liberty, conceived in terms of inherent, indefeasible rights (particularly the right of private property), the republican writers stressed political liberty and the welfare of the res publica.
Cato's Letters were occasioned by what Trenchard and Gordon saw as the latest efforts to introduce corruption in government, stifle the liberties of Englishmen, and overturn the British constitution.
In the republican tradition, the way to preserve Liberty and defeat Power was to separate and check political power.
www.ios.org /navigator/articles/nav+interview_jerome-huyler-locke.asp   (2608 words)

  
 PROFESSOR ROTHBARD ANDTHE THEORY ON INTEREST
The economics of liberty meshes with the ethics of liberty, and together they help us to understand the history of a country that was conceived in liberty.
Rothbard's defense of the time-preference theory of interest and his use of the theory as a building block in his treatise on economics inspires the remainder of this essay.
Neither Mises nor Rothbard has specifically addressed the question of waiting as a factor of production, but passages can be found in the writings of each suggesting that the time-preference view and the waiting-as-a-factor view are to some extent compatible.
www.auburn.edu /~garriro/d5rothbard.htm   (2608 words)

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