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Michael Erle Harper Enterprises Consolidated

Michael  Erle Harper

Philosophical Background

The theory of instantaneous jumping or the hyperspace from point A to point B can be an inscription that somewhere in the universe there has been theorized or projected that at the speed of light which is 186,000 miles per second that time has been accelerated at a exponential rate one hundred times.  It's to another part of the universe instantaneous at the immediate rate that exponential accelerated based on science that is explained.

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That is too awesome somewhere in the universe that the opposite or equal action has occurred.  In short, there has been an instantaneous deceleration.  The form of a negative exponential value that as near or exact in opposite of the accelerated collectively somewhere in time and space the universe bean.  It has also been theorized the universe is a larger sphere that is more complex to a similar to the travel that is encountered on earth.  In other words, when traveling east continue, on earth  it will eventually become west.  That is of great magnitude and is of exponential value and explanation.

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To follow this explanation at the speed of light, that is 186,000 miles per second.  To complete one light year 5,865,696,000,000,000,000 miles.  To follow the theory that at the speed of light elapsed at a normal usual rate.  to theorize further is time is accelerated fasted than the usual rate of 186,000 miles per second.  It can be further theorized that a set of exponential rate can reverse polarity all together and reverse to a earlier year before all these theories were scientifically explained or documented.  For instance if time were accelerated a hundred times at 186,000 miles per second.  to further theorize in a light year at the negative exponential rate of 10-8 one can travel a light year in 5,865,696 days which is 16.0704 years.  This rate seems to be in it's infancy in reference to all essential possibilities.

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In reference to further theory a light year at the rate of 10-20 at 186,000 miles per second which is 21,398,879,544 hours or 750.992595 years can be traveled in two days which is 2.057513959 days at the rate of 10-20 exceeding the speed of light.

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If you take all the and imagine traveling a billion light years it's probably not too far out of the equation

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All that calculus includes all the variables. As we increase exponential value the imagination is endless as we realize that planet earth is revolving in a spinning rotation exceeding a thousand miles per hour and seems to be in a motionless state.  Stability is a important factor.  I do believe and if focus is a reality suggest otherwise.

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Physics is a important subject and is of importance.  Also is philosophy and law in the physical sense w which is physics and the literal sense which is our legal system.

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As, I further theorize one billion light years can be traveled at a rate of 10-27 exceeding the speed of light.  to be practical and safe that would be the faster I could imagine at this point at a exponential accelerated rate that could be mathematically suggested in a matter of days.

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To get more to the point, in other words, I would theorize the rate of 10-60 at the speed of 186,000 miles per second accelerated at the speed of 10-60(r.t=d), one can travel a billion light years in 2.140 days at the usual sped of 186,000 miles per second or five point eight, six, three, zero, one, three, six, nine, nine as twenty four point ninety minutes ... Now be honest.... uh... huh... that's what I thought. We can do this... it's just being man about it... Man.... It's just how I make a living. If I was real I'd would be some kind of animal... wild... most likely... and that's how I get my freedom... and I can probably... not that it matters... Not much of a problem from my point of view.... Star Trek... is nothing to be desired in this neck of the woods, but you have to start somewhere and to think things out to a logical conclusion and yet you can experience them also if you apply yourself and with a commitment about putting it on the line and this will someday be reality. it's a matter of following the law. With that in mind mortality for the individual is one thing, but eternity is another which is some place I spend all of my time... Al aboard the Universe is waiting for you.... as my usual favorite quote, "make it so.

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                                                              THE WORLD OF IDEAS

IDEA:  Defined:  A plan of action:  design/something imagined or pictured in the mind/a central meaning or purpose/synonyms:  Concept/notion/impression. "There's one chance to make a first impression!"

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The Merriam Webster Dictionary/Merriam-Webster Inc.

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Springfield, MA  01102

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Idealism

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Deontology- the theory of study of moral obligation

Idealism- a theory that ultimate reality has a realm of transcending phenomena.

Theory- the analysis of facts in relation to one another...

Moral- of relating to principles of right and wrong behavior. / obligation- the action of obligation oneself to a course of action./  Ultimate- a most remote in space or time./  Transcend- to climb across one transcend- to rise above, go beyond limits to triumph over the negative or restrictive aspects of- overcome./  Phenomena- non stand phenomenon- plural-an-observable fact or event-an object or aspect known through the senses rather than by thought or intuition temporal or spatiotemporal./  Temporal- as relating to time as opposed to eternity.  Spatiotemporal- having to relate to spatial and temporal qualities of or relating to time and space.

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Define as- all statements whose denial would be self-contradictory, and to define the term synthetic as meaning "not analytic", the distinction, introduced by Kent in..."The Critique of Reason- as in the mid 20th century, particular in view of objections raised by WVO QUNE.

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     U.S. Logician and Philosopher

     He completed his Ph.D at Harvard University in 1932 and joined the faculty there in 1936.  From 1942 to 1945 he served as a Naval Intelligence officer in Washington D.C. promoted to full professor at Harvard in 1948,m he remained until 1978, when he retired.

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There influenced by logical positivism on the Vienna Circle, he famously rejected one of their cardinal

        doctrines, the analytical synthetic distinction.                          Thursday, July 19, 2012

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       QUINE WILLARD VAN ORIMAN

       The school, formally instituted at the University of Vienna in a seminar of Moritz Schick (1882-1936), in 1922 continued there as the Vienna Circle until 1938.  It proposed several revolutionary theses: (1) All meaningful discourse consists either of (a) the formal sentences of logic and mathematics or (b) the factual propositions of the special sciences, (2) Any assertions, including including the renouncements of religion,  belong to neither of the two classes of, (1) And therefore meaningless.

     Some logical positivists, notably A.J. Ayer, hold that assertions in ethics (e.g. "It is wrong to steal", do not function logically as statement s of fact, but only as expressions of the speaker's feelings of approval or disapproval towards some action.

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Almost home the bridge of University Avenue near Airport Road intersection in Fairbanks, Alaska

Postulate- to assume or claim as true, existent, or necessary, depend upon or start from the postulate.

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Emotivism- according to the Emotivist; when we say "you acted wrongly in stealing the money", we are not expressing any fact beyond and the stated by, "you stole that money"...(this however, as it we had stated this fact with (special tone of adherence,...for saying that something is wrong, we are expressing our feeing of disapproval toward it.  Emotivism was expounded by A.J. Ayer in Language.  Truth and Logic (1936) and developed it.  Emotivism was expounded by A.J. Ayer in Language.  Truth and Logic (1936) and developed by Charles Stevenson in Ethics and Language (1945).

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Non-Cogitivism

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In the Language of Morals (1952), Richard M. Hare (born 1919) agreed that in making moral judgments we are not primarily seeking to describe anything, but we are expressing attitudes, instead, moral judgments prescribe are a form of imperative sentence (see Presriptivism)

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Imperative- of relating to, or something the grammatical meade that expressed the will to influence the behavior of another.

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Prescriptivism- to provide a foothold for reasoning in the constraint that moral judgments must be "universal sizable" ...that is , that if one judges a particular action wrong, one must also judge any relevantly similar action to be wrong.  universal ability  is not a substantive moral principle but is logical.

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Feature or moral terms...anyone who uses such terms as "right and "ought, is logically committed to universalizability.

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Ethics- branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of ultimate and standards by which humans actions can be judged right or wrong.

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See

Naturalistic Fallacy-

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In 1903, G.E. Moore presented in Principles Ethica has "open question argument", against what he called naturalistic fallacy with the aim of proving that :good: is the name of a simple, unanalyzable quality, incapable of being defined in terms of some natural quality of the world, whether, the of something else, including something supernatural.

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     John Stuart Mill                                                                           Herbert Spencer

     British philosopher and                                       A System of Logic (2vol.,1843)

     Economist                                      Principles of Political  Economy (2 vol. 1948

     1859 on Liberty                                                                        1863 Utilitarianism

     Herbert Spencer

     English Sociologist and Philosopher

     Held that the physical,  organic, and social rains are interconnected and developed according to identical evolutionary principles, a scheme suggested by the evolution of biological species.

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The sociocultural evolution amounted to, in Spencer's phrase.  "The survival for the fittest."  The free market system without interference by government, would weed out the weak and unfit.

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His controversial lassez-faire philosopher was phrased by Social Darwinists such as William Graham Sumner and opposed by sociologists, such as Lester Frank Ward.

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Liked or loathed, Spencer was one of the most discussed Victorian thinkers.  Wealth was to be a sign of to be a sign of superiority and its absence a sign of unfitness.

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Walter Bagehot

Born February 3, 1826

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Langport, Simursel, England

Died March 24, 1877, Langport

English Economist, Political Analyst, and Journalist

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While working in his uncle's bank wrote literary essays and economic articles that led to his involvement with Economist.

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The English Constitution (1867)

Physics and Politics (1872)

Lombard Street (1873)

it falls, somewhat outside.

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Deontological ethics and consequentialism, and it agrees with consequentialism (consequences), that criterion of an action's being morally right or wrong lies in the relation to an end that has intrinsic value, but more closely resembles deontological ethics in its view that morally right actions are constitutive of the end itself and not mere instrumental means to the end.

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Eudaemonism- a theory that the highest ethical - good is happiness and personal well-being.  Deontological ethics- deontological ethics holds that at least some acts are morally wrong in themselves...e.g...lying, breaking a  promise, punishing the innocent...  The most important exponent of deontological ethics is Immanuel Kant- Categorical Imperative...

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Virtues...prudence- temperance- fortitude- justice...Socrates...found in Plato and Aristotle.  

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Immanuel Kant- German Philosopher- one of the foremost thinkers of "Enlightenment...The son of a saddler, (University of Konigsberg)...Professor of logical and metaphysics.  His critique of pure reason discusses the nature of knowledge- 1781)

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     The Critique of Practical Reason (1788)

     The ground work of the metaphysics of Morals (1785)...

     And his last great work...The Critique of Judgment (1790)

     Analytic- Synthetic Distinction; deontological ethics, idealism;

     And last , but least Kantianism.

     Berkeley, George

Born march 12, 1685

near Dysert Castle, near Thomastown?  County Kill Kenney, Ireland

Died January 24, 1753, Oxford England

Irish Bishop, Philosopher, and Social Activist...

He worked principally at Trinity College, Dublin

(to 1713) and a Bisoh of Clayne (1734-52)

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He is best known for his Contention that, for material objects, to be perceived ("Esse est percipi)  Unlike Locke, he did not believe that exists any material substance external to the mind, but  rather objects exist only as collections of sensible ideas.

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An Essay Towards a new Theory of Vision (1709),  Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710), and there Dialogues Between Hyles and Philonais (1713)

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     The City of Berkeley, California, is named for him.

     John Locke

     Born August 29, 1632, Wrington, Somerset, England

     Died October 28, 1704, Oakes, Essex

     English Philosopher

     

Educated at Oxford, principally in medicine and science, he became a Physician and advisor to the future 3rd Earl of Shattesbury (1607-72).

He left to France, but after Shattsbury Fall fled to the Netherlands where he supported future William II.

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After the Glorious Revolution (1688) Locke returned to England to become the Commissioner of Appeals, a post he held to his death.

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In his major philosopher work, Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1670), knowledge begins from the sensation and introspection rather than innate ideas.

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Conservatism

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Political attitude or ideal denoting for institutions and practices that have delved historically and are thus manifications of continuity and stability.

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It was first expressed in the modern works of Edmund Burke in reaction in the French Revolution.  Which burke believed  tornisted its ideas through excessed.  Conservatives believe that the implementation of change should be minimal and gradual, they appreciate history and are more realistic and idealistic.

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Well-Known parties include the British conservative Party.  The German Christian Democratic Union, the U.S. Republican party and the Japanese Liberal-Democratic Party.

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See also

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Christian Democracy 

Edmund Burke

Born January 12, 1729, Dublin

died July 9, 1797, Beaconsfield, bucking Homeshire, England

British Parliamentarian, Creator, and political philosopher,

son of a lawyer, he begin school and lost interest-

Essays, published gained the attention (1757-58),

of Denis Diderot, Immanuel Kent, and Grottheld Lessing,

He entered politics in (1765) as secretary to a Whig leader and came involved in the  controversy over whether Parliament or the Monarch controlled the executive.  He is often regarded as the founder of modern conservatism.

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Denis Diderot

born October 8, 1784 Paris

French men of letters and Philosopher

Educated by Jesuits, Diderot...later received degrees

From the University of Paris, from 1745-1772.

He served as chief editor of the 35-volume Encyclopedia,

A principal work of the Enlightenment.

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He composed such influential works as the Letter on the Death

And Dumb (1751), which studies the function of language...

And the thoughts on the interpretation of Nature (1754)

Essay on Painting (written 1705) the novel "The Nun"

(written 1760) and Renequ's nephews (finished 1774),

He also wrote plays and theatrical works on drama.

See also

Jean Lerond d' Alembert

Born, November 17, 1717, Paris, France,

Died October29, 1783, Paris

French mathematician, scientist, philosopher and writer.

In 1743 he published a treatise on dynamics containing "d" alement's principle, relating to Issac newtons laws of motion, He developed partial differential,

equations and published findings of his research on integral calculus, and controlled articles on music, as well, and he also published treaties on acoustics.

He was elected the acade'mie Francalse in 1754.

Dynamics

Branch of mechanics that ideas with the motion of the objects in relation to force, mass, and momentum, and energy.

Dynamics can be divided into two branches.  Kinematics and Kinetics.  The foundation of dynamics were laid by Galileo, who derived the law of motion for falling bodies and was the first to recognize that all changes of velocity of a body are the result of forces.

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Issac Newton formulated this observation in his second law of motion (See Newtons Law of motion).

Relations between the forces acting on a body and the motion of the body, formulated by Issac Newton.

The laws describe only the motion of a body as a whole and 

valid only for motions relative to the frame.

The first law, also called the law of inertia states 

that if the body is at rest or moving at a constant speed

in a straight line.

The second law states that the force F acting on a body

is equal to the mass M of the body times its

acceleration A, or F=MA.

The third law, also action-reaction law, states 

that the actions of two bodies on each other 

are also equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.

 

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(Rudulf Carnap)

Emotivism

Verifiability Principle.

The groundwork of the metaphysics of Morals was based on the principles known as the "categorical formation of which is Act only on that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it should became universal law

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In his last work, concerns the nature of aesthetic judgment and the existence of teleology, or purposiveness.

Carnap, Rudolf...

Born May 18, 1891...

Ronsdurf, Germany

Died in Santa Monica, California

U.S.

German born U.S. Philosopher

He earned a Doctorate in Physics at the University of Jena,...the faculty of the University of Vienna, where was born he soon became a influential member of a group of philosophers, mathematicians, and scientist known as the Vienna Circle...

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Carnap immigrated to the U.S. in 1935 and taught at the University of Chicago (1936-52).  After two years at the institute for advanced study at Princeton (1952-54), he joined the faculty of the University of California at Los Angeles, where he remained to his death.

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Carnap sought to give his basic thesis of Empiricism 

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His major works include "Logical structure of the World (1928)...the logical syntax of Language (1934), introduction to Semantics (1942), Meaning and Necessity (1947), and The Logical Foundations of probability (1950).

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Logical- of relating to, involving or being in accordance with logic...capable of reasoning in a orderly cogent fashion.

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Analytic deductive- relating to, or provable deduction/reasoning separating something into complicated parts or constituent elements.

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Structure- something arranged in a definite pattern of organization.

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Syntax- the way in which linguistic elements are put together to form constituents the part of grammar dealing with this.

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Language- audible, articulate meaningful sound as produced by the action of the vocal organs.  Pressure of circumstance physical or moral compulsion impossibility of a contrary order or condition.

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Function- a basis (principle, or axiom) upon which something stands or- supported= in fact.

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Probability- geometry a branch of mathematics that deals with measurement of properties, and relationships or points, lines, angles, surfaces and solids- broadly, the study of given elements that remain invariant under specified functions.

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Empiricism- knowledge derived from experience.  All concepts are derived from experience are necessarily involved in it's just function if he is known to utilize knowledge independent of experience...this is not sound in concept...John Locke, George Berkeley, David Hume, Francis Bacon.

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Function- the action for which a person or thing is specially fitted or used for which a thing exists.

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Purpose- something set up as an object or end to be obtained.

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Intention- a determination to act in a certain way.

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Resolve- to make clear or understandable to find a mathematical solution.

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Transformation- the operation of changing (as by rotation or mapping) one configuration or expression into another in accordance in mathematical rule.

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In variant- unchanged by specified mathematical or physics operations or transformations.

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A aerial view of Feather River College in Quincy, California.

The power of the Sovereign is ultimately justified by the consent of the governed, given a hypothetical social contract rather than divine right (sic divine kingship).

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In the economic realm, liberals in the 19th Century urged the end of the state interference in the economic life of society.

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Following Adam Smith...

The argued that the economic systems based on free market are more efficient and generate more prosperity than those that are partly state controlled.

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In respect of wealth and great in equalities created by the industrial revolution.

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In Europe and North America, liberals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries advanced limited state intervention in the market and creation of state funded social services, such as free pubic education and insurance.

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In the U.S. the New Deal program undertaken by President Franklin D. Roosevelt typified modern liberalism within a vast scope of government activities and its increased regulation of business.

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U.S. Economic stagnation in the late 1970's led to a revival of classic positions favoring free market systems especially among political conservatism in Britain and the U.S.

See

Conservatism

Individualism

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Some ideas represent actual qualities of objects (such as size, shape, or weight, and others perceive qualities, which do not exact in objects as they affect observers (such as colour, taste, or (smells),

succeed in giving a clear account of the origin of ideas of substance.

 

(It is "something-I know-not what" the idea of "self," though his account of personal identity in terms of memory: was influential.

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In the philosophy of language he identified the meanings of words with ideas rather than things.

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In two treaties of Government (1690), he defended a doctrine of natural rights, a concept that a political ruler political authority is limited and conditional on the ruler's fulfillment of his obligation to serve the pubic good.

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A classic formation of the principles of political liberalism.

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The work influenced the American and French revolutions and the Constitution of the U.S.

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He is considered the founding figure of British empiricism.

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Liberalism-Political and economic doctrine that emphasis of the rights and freedoms of the individual need to limit the powers of government.

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It's basic ideas were formed expression in works by Thomas Hobbs.

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