Book contents
- Thomas Jefferson
- Cambridge Studies on the American South
- Frontispiece
- Thomas Jefferson
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Methods and Bibliography
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Lincoln and Historiography
- 3 Let Our Workshops Remain at Monticello
- 4 Life, Liberty, Property, and Peace
- 5 What is Genius? “Openness, Brilliance, and Leadership”
- 6 A Renaissance Man in the Age of the Enlightenment
- 7 Baconism and Natural Science
- 8 Anthropology and Ethnic Cleansing: White “Rubbish,” Blacks, and Indians
- 9 Education, Religion, and Social Control
- 10 Women and the Count of Monticello
- 11 Debt, Deference, and Consumption
- 12 Defining the Presidency
- Index
4 - Life, Liberty, Property, and Peace
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2019
- Thomas Jefferson
- Cambridge Studies on the American South
- Frontispiece
- Thomas Jefferson
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Methods and Bibliography
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Lincoln and Historiography
- 3 Let Our Workshops Remain at Monticello
- 4 Life, Liberty, Property, and Peace
- 5 What is Genius? “Openness, Brilliance, and Leadership”
- 6 A Renaissance Man in the Age of the Enlightenment
- 7 Baconism and Natural Science
- 8 Anthropology and Ethnic Cleansing: White “Rubbish,” Blacks, and Indians
- 9 Education, Religion, and Social Control
- 10 Women and the Count of Monticello
- 11 Debt, Deference, and Consumption
- 12 Defining the Presidency
- Index
Summary
The Declaration of Independence, with its appeal to “the opinions of mankind,” was clearly intended to gain recognition from other nations, particularly the French monarch, but paradoxically it contained an almost gratuitous anti-monarchist dig that was at best undiplomatic and might even have proven counter-productive. Its egalitarian language implicitly assailed not only the divine rights of George III, but those of all kings, and could not have warmed the heart of Louis XVI. Yet one of its drafters, Benjamin Franklin, departed on his mission to secure that monarch’s assistance only three months after helping to frame the Declaration’s anti-royalist rhetoric. The Declaration expressed the shared perspectives of a particular disgruntled elite, whose emotions were neither harmonious nor egalitarian. The doctrine that all men are created equal was obviously untrue, and had less to do with “harmonizing sentiments of the day,” as Jefferson later called them, than with igniting the emotions of domestic mobs.
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- Information
- Thomas JeffersonA Modern Prometheus, pp. 102 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019