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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. The concept of political revolution has existed as a discontented rumbling since the day man decided to govern himself. Since that time, the inherent conflict of maintaining a balance between political authority and the people upon which it is imposed has challenged even the most democratic governments. John Locke is one outspoken historical figure who supported the right to revolution against existing political authority when it impeded upon man's intrinsic natural rights. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCLockeRv.rtf
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maintaining a balance between political authority and the people upon which it is imposed has challenged even the most democratic governments. John Locke is one outspoken historical figure who
supported the right to revolution against existing political authority when it impeded upon mans intrinsic natural rights. "John Lockes writings were a call to arms, an assertion of the
right and duty to forcibly and violently remove illegitimate rulers and their servants. This provided the moral and legal basis for many great revolutions, and many governments" (Donald, no
date). The concepts of inequality and community were well documented by myriad eloquent historical figures, with John Locke among the most profound.
That this critical thinker looked upon inequality as societys downfall is no coincidence, inasmuch as he also asserted that community did not hold the value he believed it should
for the level of commitment it requires from its populace. Questioning the assumption that the will of the majority is always the correct one, he argued that the goal
of government should be to secure freedom, equality and justice for all within the state, regardless of the will of the majority. "Natural rights are those rights such as
life (from conception), liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Hence, laws and statutes which violate natural rights, though they may have the color of law, are not law but
impostors" (Wheeler, 1996, p. S12). Clearly, the fundamental basis of Lockes (1952) viewpoint on justifiable revolution revolves around the notion of natural rights that inherently accompanies humanity. Within the
realm of life exists inherent elements to ones existence; paramount to mans existence is the concept of natural rights. Philosophers have long postulated what, exactly, these rights consist of
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