Product DescriptionHigh quality content by Wikipedia articles! Popular sovereignty and popular sovereignty is the belief that the legitimacy of the state is created by the will or consent of his people, who are the source of political power. It is closely associated with the social contract philosophers, including Thomas Hobbes, John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Popular sovereignty expresses a concept and do not necessarily reflect or describe a political reality. It is often contrasted with the concept of parliamentary sovereignty. Benjamin Franklin expressed the idea when he writes: “In free governments the rulers are the servants and the people their superiors and sovereigns…. More>>
Product DescriptionThis digital document is an article in the Journal of Church and State, published by JM Dawson Studies in Church and State on 1 January 2005. The length of the article is 549 words. The page length shown above is based on a type of 300 pages of text. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon. com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. DetailsTitle Quote: Explaining the English Revolution: Hobbes and his contemporaries. (Book Review) Author: R. Dean DavenportPublication: Journal of Church and State (with refereeing) Date: January 1, 2005Publisher: JM Dawson Studies in Church and StateVolume: 47 Issue: 1 Page: 170 (3) Article Type: Book ReviewDistributed by Thomson Gale. . . More>>
Product DescriptionThis is mass produced from digital images created by the University of Michigan University Library’s efforts to scale scanning. The library seeks to preserve the intellectual content of articles in a manner that facilitates and encourages a variety of uses. The results of the process in digital reformatting an electronic version of the original text that can be both online accessible and usable to create copies printed. The library also includes the value and usefulness of print and make reprints available to the public whenever possible. This book and hundreds of thousands more may be found in the HathiTrust, an archive of digitized collections of research libraries of many. For access to the University of Michigan Library’s digital collections, please see http://www. lib. umich. edu and information on HathiTrust, please visit http://www. hathitrust. org. . . More>>