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The Federalist Papers

The Federalist Papers
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Additional The Federalist Papers Information

This is a new edition of the classic text, the papers of Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison written in support of the then-proposed Constitution of the United States. In addition to the supplementary materials provided (including a copy of the Constitution and an Index of Ideas), this revised edition also contains a new introduction, historical glossary, selected bibliography, the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation.

 

What Customers Say About The Federalist Papers:

Peter Schiff on the other hand shows where we are today and how things have changed for the worse since then. This book does a great job of showing where we were in the U.S. I recommend reading this book and following it up by reading Crash Proof 2.0, but don't read the two unless you want to see the truth, as I've learned the truth can be and is scary. I studied economics in college and have begun to follow one of the mainstream economists Peter Schiff. He recommended this book to his followers.

There, 81 year old Dr Benjamin Franklin observing the proceedings-- 6 hour speeches not unheard of--described General Washington framed by a painting of a sunrise (not a sunset he clearly distinguishes) while the Federaliststs and Anti-Federalsits debated the fate of their national government. The amazing accomplishment of presenting a Constitution of the United States by September 20th to the Continental Congress as well as having the first state sign on (ratification) by December 6th was remarkable.

The Federalist Papers grants us the remarkable wisdom written for the very purpose of rebuidling a dysfunctional central government that could oversee the states. The other states quickly followed with only two of the thirteen voting against ratification.

I would have closed this book, had I not encountered the introduction (81 pages) of Isaac Kramnick who restores a hard to imagine history when 13 bickering states on the verge of tyranny (including naval battles)consilidated their confederate powers to form a republican form of government. This is included in Kramnick's notes.

It was that which formed our government -the ideas written here- and not the revolution itself. I love the details he includes about the framers Hamilton and Madison as they first presented their case in the summer of 1787 in Philadelphia.

Despite the remarkable achievement that the gifted architects of the constituion(Hamilton and Madison) accomplished that summer, they had even more provisions for the form of our government and its function that were not to be.

It is well organized, has a great preface, and is loaded full of text to be engulfed in.Learning about the history of our legal system is not only essential for a legal student but should be important for every U.S. It explains some of the things that were going on around the constitutuional convention and why the laws are how they were written.The purchasing experience was, as always, terrific and I got the book in record time. I have my nose glued to this book. citizen as well. This is a thick book and will take quite some time to finish reading but, with that said, the book should be continually used as a reference book.I recommend this one. I bought the book because I am a new legal studies student and was told that the Supreme Court uses the federalist papers to define the constitution. I thought, "what else could be better than to read the same papers that the supreme court uses." So, I had to buy this book and was really impressed.

The message is: "no happiness without liberty, no liberty without self-government, no self-government without constitutionalism, no constitutionalism without stability and order" (p.xvi). John Jay was a distinguished New York lawyer who authored the NY Constitution of 1777 (a source for the Federal Constitution). This change was controversial, so advocates of the New began writing a series of articles to explain the changes. Alexander Hamilton began the series and was aided by James Madison and John Jay. Clinton Rossiter says the most important articles are numbers 1, 2, 6, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 23, 37, 39, 47, 48, 49, 51, 62, 63, 70,78, 84, and 85. It has been quoted by the Supreme Court for judicial review, executive independence, and national supremacy ('Introduction').

The end of the Revolution in 1781 left the United States operating under the Articles of Confederation, a union of equal states. Others were added over time. The immediate purpose was to win over New York to insure the new Constitution (p.ix). [But that leaves no paper trail]. Promises, threats, bargains, and debates were more important than eloquent words (p.xi). This book has the 85 articles, the Constitution, and 24 amendments, and an 'Index of Ideas'.'The Federalist' is the most important work in political science that has been written in the United States. There were problems with this government. A group of men convened in Philadelphia to consider Amendments.

The Federalist is a "bundle of compromises". James Madison was the "most useful member of the Convention of 1787" (p.x). Alexander Hamilton was the person behind these articles, the only man from New York to sign. The value of these articles derived from the endurance of the Constitution and the country it created. These articles were published from October 1787 to May 1788.

Given the diverse interests of society, there is a way to keep balance in government.Madison was a proponent of limited government while Hamilton admired an "energetic government". Articles 15 to 22 address the defects of the Articles of Confederation. It explains the value of a Federal government, the failure of the Articles of Confederation, the defense of a federal constitution, and the truths about a free government (p.xii). The result was a new Constitution to address the problems of the old. All had distinguished careers.'The Federalist' was a source of arguments for the new Constitution.

They argue for the adoption of the new Federal Constitution. Those who objected to the original quickly added a Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the Constitution. It provides the "genuine meaning" of the Constitution.

The book showed earlier than expected and was in the great shape it was supposed to be in.

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