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Introduction | ||
The Point of Departure and Its Importance for the Future of the Anglo-Americans | 26 | |
The Social State of the Anglo-Americans | 45 | |
The Principle of the Sovereignty of the People in America | 54 | |
The Necessity of Studying What Happens within the Particular States before Discussing the Government of the Union | 57 | |
The Judicial Power in the United States and Its Influence on Political Society | 99 | |
The Federal Constitution | 113 | |
How It Can Be Strictly Said That in the United States It Is the People That Govern | 177 | |
Parties in the United States | 178 | |
Liberty of the Press in the United States | 185 | |
The Government of Democracy in America | 202 | |
What Are the Real Advantages That American Society Derives from Democratic Government | 241 | |
The Omnipotence of the Majority in the United States and Its Effects | 257 | |
What Tempers the Tyranny of the Majority in the United States | 273 | |
Principal Causes That Tend to Maintain the Democratic Republic in the United States | 289 | |
Some Considerations on the Present State and Probable Future of the Three Races That Inhabit the Territory of the United States | 331 | |
The Philosophic Method of the Americans | 11 | |
The Principal Source of Beliefs among Democratic Peoples | 16 | |
How, in the United States, Religion Is Able to Make Use of Democratic Instincts | 27 | |
The Progress of Catholicism in the United States | 35 | |
How Equality Suggests to Americans the Idea of the Indefinite Perfectibility of Man | 39 | |
Why the Americans Are More Devoted to the Practice of the Sciences Than to Their Theory | 46 | |
The Industry of Literature | 66 | |
Why the Study of Greek and Latin Literature Is Especially Useful in Democratic Societies | 67 | |
Some Particular Tendencies of Historians in Democratic Times | 89 | |
Why Democratic Peoples Show a More Ardent and More Lasting Love for Equality Than for Liberty | 101 | |
Individualism in Democratic Countries | 105 | |
How the Americans Combat Individualism by Free Institutions | 109 | |
The Use That the Americans Make of the Association in Civil Life | 113 | |
The Relationship between Associations and Newspapers | 118 | |
Relationships between Civil and Political Associations | 122 | |
How the Americans Combat Individualism by the Doctrine of Interest Rightly Understood | 127 | |
How the Americans Apply the Doctrine of Interest Rightly Understood in Matters of Religion | 131 | |
The Taste for Material Well-Being in America | 134 | |
The Particular Effects That the Love of Material Pleasures Produces in Democratic Times | 137 | |
Why Certain Americans Display Such an Intense Spiritualism | 140 | |
Why the Americans Prove to Be So Uneasy in the Midst of Their Well-Being | 142 | |
How Religious Beliefs Sometimes Turn the Soul of Americans toward Spiritual Pleasures | 149 | |
How, in Times of Equality and of Skepticism, It Is Important to Place the Goal of Human Actions at a Greater Distance | 155 | |
Why, among the Americans, All Honest Occupations Are Considered Honorable | 158 | |
What Makes Almost All Americans Lean toward Industrial Occupations | 160 | |
How Aristocracy May Emerge from Industry | 164 | |
How Moral Habits Become Milder as Conditions Become More Equal | 171 | |
Influence of Democracy on the Family | 200 | |
The Education of Young Women in the United States | 206 | |
How the Young Woman Reappears in the Features of the Wife | 209 | |
How Equality of Conditions Contributes to the Maintenance of Good Morals in America | 212 | |
How the Americans Understand the Equality of Man and Woman | 219 | |
How the Aspect of Society, in the United States, Is at Once Agitated and Monotonous | 236 | |
On Honor in the United States and in Democratic Societies | 238 | |
Why There Are So Many Ambitious Men and So Few Great Ambitions in the United States | 250 | |
Why Great Revolutions Will Become Rare | 258 | |
Equality Naturally Gives to Men the Taste for Free Institutions | 295 | |
That the Ideas of Democratic Peoples Regarding Government Are Naturally Favorable to the Concentration of Powers | 297 | |
That the Sentiments of Democratic Peoples Accord with Their Ideas in Leading Them to Concentrate Power | 300 | |
What Kind of Despotism Democratic Nations Have to Fear | 322 | |
Continuation of the Preceding Chapters | 328 | |
General View of the Subject | 336 | |
Notes | 341 |
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Add Democracy in America: The Complete and Unabridged Volumes I and II (Bantam Classics), From America's call for a free press to its embrace of the capitalist system, Democracy in America—first published in 1835—enlightens, entertains, and endures as a brilliant study of our national government and character. Philosopher John Stuart Mi, Democracy in America: The Complete and Unabridged Volumes I and II (Bantam Classics) to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Democracy in America: The Complete and Unabridged Volumes I and II (Bantam Classics), From America's call for a free press to its embrace of the capitalist system, Democracy in America—first published in 1835—enlightens, entertains, and endures as a brilliant study of our national government and character. Philosopher John Stuart Mi, Democracy in America: The Complete and Unabridged Volumes I and II (Bantam Classics) to your collection on WonderClub |