God and/or Nature in Tocqueville’s Explanation of the Physical World

Democracy in America was written in 1835, before philosophies such as Marxism, Nihilism, Scientific Materialism, biological determinism/sociobiology, moral relativism, moral subjectivism, began to become prominent influences in shaping people’s worldviews from the mid-late 1800s about to the present. A recent… Read moreGod and/or Nature in Tocqueville’s Explanation of the Physical World

“Social Condition of the Anglo-Americans” Expository

Tocqueville begins this section by underscoring how important a people’s social condition is to the development of their society. He then goes on to elaborately describe the social condition of America during its development, what traits were embued then, and… Read more“Social Condition of the Anglo-Americans” Expository

HOW EQUALITY SUGGESTS TO THE AMERICANS THE IDEA OF THE INDEFINITE PERFECTABILITY OF MAN

From Tocqueville’s Chapter VIII, he highlights the fact that humans distinguish themselves from brutes because of their capability of indefinitely improving. He argues that one who is under an aristocracy does not find trouble improving, but indefinitely improving. The aristocracy… Read moreHOW EQUALITY SUGGESTS TO THE AMERICANS THE IDEA OF THE INDEFINITE PERFECTABILITY OF MAN