User:Kwaddick/sandbox
History
[edit]Early Beginnings
[edit]Liberalism originally arose from both deep scholarly and philosophical roots. With the theory’s prime principle being international cooperation and peace, early influences are seen in some bigger religious practices sharing the same goal. It was later in the 17th and 18th centuries in which political liberalism began to take form that challenged nobility and inherited equality.[10] Followed shortly after was the Enlightenment where liberal ideals began to develop with works by philosophers such as Voltaire, Locke, Smith, and German thinker Immanuel Kant. In part, liberal scholars were influenced by the Thirty Years War and the Enlightenment.[1] The length, and disastrous affects of the Thirty Years War caused a common disdain for warfare throughout much of Europe. Thinkers, like Locke and Kant, wrote about what they saw in the world around them. They believed that war is fundamentally unpopular and that man is born with certain writes because the end of the Thirty Years War proved these ideas to them.
John Locke discusses many ideas that are now attributed to Liberalism in Two Treatises of Government[2], published in 1689. In his second treatise, Locke comments on society and outlines the importance of natural rights and laws. Locke believes that people are born as blank slates without any preordained ideas or notions. This state is known as the State of Nature because it shows people in their most barbaric form. As people grow, their experiences begin to shape their thoughts and actions. They are naturally in the State of Nature until they choose not to be, until something changes their barbaric nature. Locke says that, civil government can remedy this anarchy.[3] When it comes to the Law of Nature, people are more likely to act rationally when there is a government in place because there are laws and consequences to abide by. Locke argues that civil government can help people gain the basic human rights of health, liberty and possession. [3] Governments that grant these rights and enforce laws benefit the world. Many of these ideas have have influenced leaders such as the Founding Father's during the American Revolution and French revolutionaries during the French Revolution.[4]
In Kant’s To Perpetual Peace,the philosopher set the way by forming guidelines to create a peace program to be applied by nations. This program would require cooperation between states as well as the mutual pursuit of secure freedom and shared benefits.[15] One such idea was the Democratic Peace Theory[5]. In To Perpetual Peace, Kant put fourth the idea that democracies do not fight wars because leaders were too worried about re-election. Because war was naturally unpopular, Kant thought that leaders would avoid burdening voters with it's costs. After seeing success in intertwining states through economic coalition, liberal supporters began to believe that warfare was not always an inevitable part of IR.[16] Support of liberal political theory continued to grow from there.
Liberal Theory Today
[edit]Kant's Democratic Peace Theory has since been revised by Neoliberals like Robery O. Keohane and Joseph S. Nye. These theorists have seen that democracies do in fact fight wars. However, democracies do not fight wars with other democracies because of capitalist ties. Democracies are economically dependent and therefore are more likely to resolve issues diplomatically. Furthermore, citizens in democracies are less likely to think of citizens in other democracies as enemies because of shared morals. [6] Kant's original ideas have influence liberalist scholars and have had a large impact on liberal thought.
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- ^ "The Enlightenment and Liberalism". uregina.ca. Retrieved 2016-10-09.
- ^ Locke, John (1689). Two Treatises of Government. England: Awnsham Churchill – via http://socserv2.socsci.mcmaster.ca/econ/ugcm/3ll3/locke/government.pdf.
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- ^ a b "Of the State of Nature - LONANG Institute". LONANG Institute. Retrieved 2016-10-09.
- ^ ushistory.org. "Foundations of American Government [ushistory.org]". www.ushistory.org. Retrieved 2016-10-09.
- ^ "Immanuel Kant, "Perpetual Peace"". www.mtholyoke.edu. Retrieved 2016-10-09.
- ^ "International institutions: Can interdependence work?". Foreign Policy. 110.