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3 Great Questions | ||||||||||||||
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Here are three "great questions" that must be answered. Think in terms of how you would answer them and how the Founding Fathers answered them.
Politics as Convenience vs. Politics As Redemption These questions were often part of the debate during The Enlightenment, when questions about human nature, the role the state, etc. dominated social and political thoughts! Generally, answers to these questions lead to one of two views of politics. These are known as: politics as convenience or politics as redemption! In politics as convenience approaches, the most you can hope for is that politics make life as convenient as possible for the individual. For example, if the nature of human existence is the battle of all against all and life is "nasty, brutish, and short" (Hobbes), then the most that you can probably hope for is that the collective actions of politics will make life a little more tolerable. In politics as redemption, the argument is made that no matter what individuals are like by nature, they can be redeemed through politics or education (Rousseau).
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