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

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    Civil Disobedience

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    Garza Mr. Kibler APUSH – 7th Hour October 17‚ 2014 Civil Disobedience The main idea of this essay is that the majority is not always right and men should let their conscience govern them and not the government itself. The message being conveyed is that people should follow what they think is right instead of going with the crowd/majority even if it means going against the government. The author of “Civil Disobedience” is Henry David Thoreau. He was an American philosopher‚ poet‚ and environmental

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    Civil Disobedience Based on the writings of Henry David Thoreau it is very relevant that he is very opposed to government involvement of any kind. He doesn’t believe that the government should be involved in everyday life. Thoreau doesn’t understand the point of having a government system that will be useful to everyone and not just a select few. Thoreau proceeds to explain his many reasons as to why the “government is best [when it] governs [the] least.” He thought people should stand up to the

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    Civil Disobedience

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    Henry David Thoreau‚ the father of Civil Disobedience‚ one of his famous quotes is “That government is best which governs not at all;’ and when men are prepared for it‚ that will be the kind of government which they will have.” This man was an inspiration to Mahatma Gandhi along with Martin Luther King. Thoreau went to live in the forest a bit to simply live with nature and write about it‚ from what I could tell he enjoyed it very much and wrote about things he encountered. In my opinion‚

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    Henry David Thoreau

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    Henry David Thoreau INTRODUCTION Henry David Thoreau was an American author‚ poet‚ abolitionist‚ naturalist‚ tax resister‚ development critic‚ surveyor‚ historian ‚ philosopher andtranscendentalist. Henry David Thoreau was a complex man of many talents who worked hard to shape his craft and his life. He is best known for his book Walden‚ a reflection upon simple living in natural surroundings‚ and his essay‚ Civil Disobedience‚ an argument for individual resistance to civil government in moral

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    sentencing of Socrates‚ facilitating a discussion about an individual’s morality in abiding by the law. Socrates does show us that civil law should be treated as a moral obligation‚ by proving that to ignore the rule of law would be to commit moral wrong. He then qualifies this by illustrating that lawfulness is not always equal to virtuousness‚ and explaining how to remain virtuous without damaging the authority of the law. Further examination of his arguments in regards to civil disobedience reveal inconsistency

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    “It is not always the same thing to be a good man and a good citizen” (Aristotle‚ Nicomachean Ethics). Although civil disobedience may cause divisive rhetoric and chaos‚ nonviolent resistance positively impacts a free society by providing an impetus for progress and starting a dialogue about injustice. Our nation was founded on principles of civil disobedience. In Federalist #51‚ James Madison proclaimed‚ “If angels were to govern men‚ neither external nor internal controls on government would

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    Civil Disobedience On April 29‚ 1992‚ the City of Los Angeles was surrounded in a riot in response to the "not guilty" verdicts in the trial of four white Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers accused of unlawfully beating Rodney King. Six days later‚ when the fires were finally extinguished and the smoke had cleared‚ "estimates of the material damage done vary between about $800 million and $1 billion‚ 54 people had been killed‚ more than 2000 injured‚ in excess of 800 structures were

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    Civil disobedience‚ as a form of civil position and attitude‚ can be viewed as a concept that presumes an individual’s right and permissible responsibility to challenge and make own decisions against the letter and spirit of the law. It reflects on situations and contexts when these state-inflicted laws contradict the natural human laws‚ involving some impairment of existing ideals and principles. Notably to say‚ ideas of civil disobedience were present during the ancient and antique times by efforts

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    Summer Reading- Civil Disobedience Prompt: Does your book contain one or more of the following themes? What techniques does the author use to develop this theme? Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau contains the theme of power as a corrupting influence. In the essay‚ Thoreau believes that the American government does not lead its people well. By following the majority‚ the power in the so-called “unjust” government‚ Thoreau thinks that the government has been corrupted. Those who work in

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    Civil Disobedience

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    Opening question: Thoreau writes‚ “A minority is powerless while it conforms to the majority; it is not even a minority then; but it is irresistible when it clogs by its whole weight” (Thoreau 386). This line has the most meaning to be me because one person cannot change the world alone‚ they would need help. What one person can do though is turn a minority into a majority. I could also take this to mean that while being surrounded by all those who have fallen victim of the government and its

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