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5 - The Greatest Improvement on Political Institutions: Natural Rights, the Intentions of the People, and Written Constitutions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Gary L. McDowell
Affiliation:
University of Richmond
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Summary

When the delegates gathered in Philadelphia in the summer of 1787 for the convention that had been called to address their common problems, they ostensibly did so in order to revise the ineffectual Articles of Confederation; their goal was to render that first national constitution capable of meeting the exigencies of the union. Rather than offer mere revisions, however, they soon found themselves embarked on the arduous task of writing a completely new fundamental law. Believing as they did that language is the essence of law and that law is the essence of liberty, they sought to craft their new constitution as carefully as possible, pulling its words and meaning from sources they believed clear and common. At the most basic level, there would be neither place nor need in such a written constitution for “metaphysical or logical subtleties.” Freedom demanded that “there be no mysteries in the governing plan”; it had to be “plain and intelligible.” Their objective was “to form a fundamental constitution, to commit it to writing, and place it among their archives where everyone would be free to appeal to its text.” They celebrated the written constitution as simply “the greatest improvement on political institutions.”

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Emmons, Nathanael, The Dignity of Man (Providence, 1787)Google Scholar
Madison, Bishop James, Manifestations of the Beneficence of Divine Providence Towards America (Richmond, 1795)Google Scholar

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