by Fernando Alfredo RodrÃguez
This agora was born with a clear vocation to be a common space that would accommodate as many voices as they liked walking by it. Not until now has been very busy, but we remain hopeful that such things change. For now, their presence gives us the friend Fernando, through the article presented here. We hope you come back often.
JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU (1712 - 1778) ...
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, French writer born in Geneva. Contradictory figure, influenced the Jacobins and their democratic and popular will as much as conservatives and romantics.
risk preferred to present himself as a "man of paradoxes" instead of remaining a "man of prejudice."
The society needs to establish within a learning environment conducive for through appropriate action for the purpose intended, the access of everyone to freedom independently. We then in school, but the purpose of Rousseau goes beyond the boundaries of the school or family and, in general, the social institution, to find a way of action to enable man to be freed Despite the mayhem that occurs in society I sensitive.
... WE SAID:
"Man is born free but everywhere in chains live."
"These two words fatherland and citizen should be effaced from modern languages."
"Nature has made man happy and good, but society does what depraved and miserable."
HUXLEY ALDOUS LEONARD (1894 - 1963) ...
anarchist was an English writer who emigrated to the United States. Member of the renowned family of intellectuals Huxley. Known for his novels and wide range of essays, also published short stories, poetry, travel books and stories for films and screenplays. Through his novels and essays, Huxley worked as a critic of social roles, norms and ideals. He was interested also by the spiritual themes, such as parapsychology and philosophy mysticism, about which he wrote several books. At the end of his life Huxley was considered a leader of modern thought.
was also a fine essayist, rationalist and skeptic.
was also a fine essayist, rationalist and skeptic.
... WE SAID
"God is not and can not be compatible with medicine, universal happiness and machines."
"Civilization has no need of nobility or heroism. These things are symptoms of policy failure."
Montesquieu (1689 - 1755) ...
is one of the philosophers and essayists illustrated most relevant especially the articulation of the theory of separation of powers, taken for granted in modern discussions of government and has been implemented in many constitutions throughout the world.
His thoughts should be framed within the critical spirit of the French Enlightenment, as reflected in traits such as religious tolerance, the aspiration for freedom and his concept of happiness in a civic sense, if While differing from other authors of the period for seeking a more concrete and empirical as opposed to abstraction and deductive dominant.
Two points are fundamentally different in that the authors claim to original point of Montesquieu's contribution to the scientific study of human societies:
rush Montesquieu the scientific task of describing social reality as an analytical method and "positive" that does not stop at mere description of empirical facts, but attempts to organize the multiplicity of data of social reality in a small number of types.
Give a "sociological response" to the apparent diversity of social facts, under the assumption that there is an order or causality of these facts susceptible of rational interpretation.
is considered a precursor of liberalism and the one who developed the theory of separation of powers.
... WE SAID:
"I do not love God because they do not know him or the others because I know him."
"The republics have just been through luxury, monarchies through poverty. "
THOMAS PAINE (1737 - 1809) ...
With wider discontent of the colonies, Paine promoted the rational ideas he calls "common sense". criticized excessive taxes decreed by the government of His Majesty as unfair and economically wrong, favoring smuggling and corruption, the prohibition of trade with other nations, causing loss of material wealth, and lack of continental representatives in the British Parliament. He argued that the solution to all these problems was independence, a position that reported in the most famous of printed brochures, Common Sense (Common sense , 1776), which reached the circulation of half a million copies.
The doctrine of "common sense" is a milestone in history, not policy decisions in support of doctrines based on history, religion, nation, the honor or a priori notions, but the criteria endorsed by the human experience and reason. Common sense paved the way for the Declaration of Independence, ratified on July 4 that year.
... WE SAID:
"The government in its perfection, is nothing more than a necessary evil in its imperfection, is an intolerable evil."
"The world is my country, mankind are my brethren, and do good; my religion. "
ADOLF HITLER (1889 - 1945) ...
chased an aggressive foreign policy expansionist to expand Lebensraum ("living space") German to Eastern Europe, and combat an alleged international conspiracy between Judaism, Freemasonry, Communism and capitalism by the U.S. government, English and Soviet. Its policy aimed to establish a New Order ( Neuordnung ) in Germany and the Aryan race would have a global hegemonic role.
... WE SAID:
"If you want to get the sympathy of the crowd, then you say the most stupid things."
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