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Jeffersonian Democracy: a Dual Tradition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

Extract

From the great mass of Jefferson's writings, letters, and public utterances, it is possible to select isolated fragments in justification of almost any course one chooses to pursue; and the history of his forty years in the service of his country offers almost as various a pattern. Taking his career and his writings as a whole, however, and piecing together from both the broad outlines of a political philosophy, one is struck by what appears to be a dual emphasis: two diverging streams of thought, which seem at first glance to be incompatible, and which have rendered the great democrat vulnerable to the charge of inconsistency so often repeated in his own day as in ours. One of these emphases, and that most apt to be quoted by campaign orators, is on individualism; but the direction and purpose of the other is socialistic.

Both in the abstract system of the philosopher and in the concrete events of the world of action, time has a way of reconciling apparent contradictions. Historical perspective will do much to reveal unsuspected unities, and the point of view from which the inquiry is approached will do the rest.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 1934

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References

1 Social Contract, III, 15Google Scholar.

2 See letters to Adams, Oct. 28, 1813, in Writings (Memorial Edition), XIII, 400; to Cabell, Feb. 12, 1816, XIV, 422; to Kercheval, July 12, 1816, XV, 37–38.

3 Chinard, , Thomas Jefferson, 84Google Scholar.

4 Of Civil Government, II, 138Google Scholar.

5 II, 25 (ed. by Ford).

6 Ibid., 104 ff.

7 XIX, 17–18 (Mem. ed.).

8 System of Moral Philosophy, I, 319 ff. (1755)Google Scholar.

9 To Milligan, Apr. 6, 1816 (XIV, 464).

10 See Act for Establishing Elementary Schools, XVII, 418 ffGoogle Scholar; and Minutes of the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, XIX, 413 ff.Google Scholar

11 Randall, , Life of Jefferson, III, 322Google Scholar.

12 Ibid., II, 681.

13 XVII, 404 ff.

14 Channing, , History of the United States, V, 6–7, 317Google Scholar.

15 Works of John Adams (1856), X, 226Google Scholar.

16 To Kercheval, July 12, 1816 (XV, 40).

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