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''Colony,''--or ''Free State''? ''Dependence,''--or ''Just Connection''? |
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Subtitle
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An Essay Based on the Political Philosophy of the American Revolution, as Summarized in the Declaration of Independence, towards the Ascertainment of the Nature of the Political Relationship Between
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| Author
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Alpheus H. Snow
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| Category
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Essays
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| Language
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English
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| Published
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1907
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| Notes
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Delivered before the Section for the Study of the Government of Dependencies,
of the American Political Science Association, at the Meeting held at Providence,
December 29, 1906
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| Extract
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were nevertheless acting on the basis that such a law did exist and was based
on the proposition that all men are created unequal, or that some are created
equal and some unequal. The alleged superior was sometimes a private citizen,
sometimes a noble, sometimes a monarch, sometimes a government, sometimes a
state, sometimes a nation. The inferior was said to be "dependent"
upon the superior--that is, related to him directly and without any connecting
justiciary medium, so that the will of the superior controlled the will and
action of the inferior. It was this alleged law of nature and of nations, based
on an alleged divine or self-evident right of inequality--an inequality arising
from creation--which was the basis of the British Declaratory Act of 1766, which
may perhaps be called "The Declaration of Dependence." In that Act,
the State of Great Britain declared, (basing itself evidently upon the law of
nature and of nations, since there was no treaty,) that the American Colonies
"have been, are, and of ri
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