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THOMAS JEFFERSON AS A PHILOSOPHER
>I am 15 and researching Thomas Jefferson for a term paper in my world
>history class regarding him as philosopher.
>I have found several web-sites on the Internet in relation to Thomas
>Jefferson.
>If you could provide me with some more sites on him or you have some
>information I may find useful I ask that you E-mail me.
As a political philosopher, Thomas Jefferson was the greatest, in my
opinion. Much greater than Locke or Aristotle, or anyone since, because
he formulated a philosophy of government which became the chief
intellectual foundation of the American republic, and it was practical, not
theoretical like Locke and Aristotle.
I would recommend that you look at the following websites:
Thomas Jefferson on Politics & Government
http://etext.virginia.edu/jefferson/quotations/
The summaries at the head of each chapter together give an outline of
Jefferson's philosophy.
The Jeffersonian Perspective
http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/7970/index.htm
Look especially at the essay on "Individual Rights and Popular
Sovereignty." That examines Jefferson's philosophy in relation to
Locke's, showing how Jefferson took Locke's basic views, but went
much further with them, formulating the principles of SELF-
GOVERNMENT, which other philosophers never achieved.
> I am putting together a
>political viewpoint of the formation of American presidents prior to taking
>a course on National Government sometime in the future. Not sure when I
>will have the time to take the course though, but I am interested in
>learning what shaped our political policies so I can at least argue
>constructively with my intelligent husband!
With respect to your study of the political viewpoints of American
presidents: It is my belief that the political philosophy that is the
foundation of the American republic is derived from Jefferson to an extent
that is much greater than what is usually attributed to him. As befits a
person of Jefferson's modesty, he himself never claimed such a role, and it
has been easy for historians to overlook the way his political philosophy
influenced other actors, such as Madison, and played a formative role in
American government. In fact, I suspect it would make an interesting focus
for the study of the various political viewpoints of American presidents to
begin with that assumption of Jefferson's primary influence, and then chart
how that influence was altered, violated, perverted, or whatever. This
deviation was especially noticeable in the 20th century when T. Roosevelt
and Woodrow Wilson cast aside the non-involvement in European wars that was
a fundamental tenet of Jefferson, and when F.D.Roosevelt violated the
precedent established by Jefferson when the former became, in effect,
president for life. If you will review my website, Thomas Jefferson on
Politics & Government, you will find a complete political philosophy that
can serve as the ground-work for assessing the whole course of American
government, both what it is and what it should be, were it to be consistent
with fundamental principle. It was Abraham Lincoln who said, "The
principles of Jefferson are the definitions and axioms of free society."
Those principles serve as a valuable measuring-stick for assessing any
society that purports to be free.