"Henery david thoreau and socrates regarding the questions of political obligation and civil disobedience" Essays and Research Papers

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    Ricardo Henry David Thoreau Civil Disobedience Throughout history the government’s gained too much power are likely to be corrupt. It is up to citizens to go against government and get rid of any negativity. In order to change the government citizens should vote for an individual who can change the country in a positive way. Henry David Thoreau was a philosopher‚ observer‚ and writer best known for his attacks on American social

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    Civil Disobedience was written by Henry David Thoreau. The Letter From A Birmingham Jail was written by Martin Luther King Jr. They both had similarities and differences. There were injustices that were done wrong to each of them by others in the society in which they both lived. The injustices and civil disobedience they incurred should never happen to anyone. Henry David Thoreau spoke in an emotional tone in his essay “Civil Disobedience.” The emotional part of his essay of Civil Disobedience

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    The essay Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau is an essay criticizing the state of the US Government during slavery and after the Mexican American War. Thoreau had many points in this essay and it starts with the statement “Government is best which governs least” (Thoreau 1-2). He argues for the need for a more efficient government‚ he says that the current on hinders the accomplishment of the work it has created and is very ineffective. He says that people who run the government have a lack

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    forest. Thoreau’s revolutionary ideas about Civil Disobedience had a similar effect throughout the following decades on the thoughts and minds of the oppressed. Civil disobedience has evolved from a sense of right and wrong and from the consciousness of doing something for the greater good. Thoreau did not invent the concept civil disobedience‚ for we can see myriad examples throughout history. Transcendent law appeared in the writing of Socrates as well as in many of the Greek Tragedies. It

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    Thoreau’s Ideas About “Civil Disobedience” Outdated Today? “Civil disobedience” is an intentional and non-violent disobedience of law by an individual who believes that a certain law is unjust and who is willing to accept the penalty for breaking that law to bring about change and public awareness. When Henry David Thoreau wrote “On The Duty of Civil Disobedience” in 1849‚ he advocated that democracy in America could only be improved by individual activism and civil disobedience to unjust laws. Thoreau’s

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    In "Civil Disobedience"‚ why does Thoreau refuse to pay his poll tax? In Thoreau’s essay "Resistance to Civil Government"‚ Henry David Thoreau outlines a utopian society in which each individual would be responsible for governing himself. His opposition to a centralized government is an effort to disassociate with the American government‚ which at the time was supporting slavery and unjustly invading Mexico. While the individual rule would work well for Thoreau who is a man of conscience‚ it does

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    than fame‚ give me truth. I sat at a table where were rich food and wine in abundance‚ an obsequious attendance‚ but sincerity and truth were not; and I went away from the inhospitable board. The hospitality was as cold as the ices." - Henry David Thoreau‚ Walden‚ or Life In The Woods Truth vs. Fortune In Jon Krakauer’s nonfiction book Into The Wild the main character is Chris McCandless a young man who is extremely smart and who seems to have everything going

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    The long essay‚ “Civil Disobedience” was written by Henry David Thoreau to make a statement about the unethical government. He believed‚ “That government is best which governs least.” Thoreau starts of by saying‚ “American people has done all that has been accomplished; and it would have done somewhat more‚ if the government had not sometimes got in its way.” (258) Legislators are constantly putting obstacles in American’s ways. America would have accomplished a great deal more if there weren’t

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    Socrates was one of the most influential philosophers of all time. This amazing man was known only in the words of his students Plato and Xenophon. He fought in the Athenian army‚ he was a stone statuary‚ he was in the Athens assembly‚ and most of all he was a teacher of philosophy. Socrates was brave and fearless in the face of war and death; he was willing to fight for things he believed in. His words are still referenced today. Socrates was born to a working class family in the city of Athens

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    Henry David Thoreau In “Civil Disobedience‚” Henry David Thoreau focuses his ideas around the central theme‚ “It is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law‚ so much as for the right. The only obligation which I have a right to assume is to do at any time what I think right.” He defines man as a person who listens and acts to his conscience and states that if man obeys laws opposing his conscience‚ such as laws created by legislators‚ then he is no better than an animal. Thoreau begins

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