Title: The Jeffersonian Era (chapter 2)
1The Jeffersonian Era (chapter 2)
- Political Economy
- Ideology
- Schooling
2Political economy in the 13 colonies
Pilgrims (tribal societies)
Merchants (diversity individualism)
Plantation owners (caste system slavery)
3The end of Feudalism in Europe
- Feudalism A military, political, and religious
system which developed in Europe during the
centuries after the collapse of the Roman Empire - The end of feudalism in Europe
- 12th and 14th century renaissances (ideas from
the Byzantine and Arab worlds stimulated European
thinkers) - Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, and Newton
- International commerce, emergence of the middle
class (bourgeoisie) - Introduction of explosive powder from China
- Rebellions in England and France
- The development of the ideology of liberalism
4Classical Liberal Ideology Fundamental Tenets
- Faith in Reason
- Natural Law
- Republican Virtue
- Progress
- Nationalism
- Freedom
5Fundamental Dimensions of Classical Liberalism
From Feudal Ideology To Classical Liberal Id.
State control of ? economy Capitalism
State religion ? Separation of church and state
Divine right of king ? Republican (representative) government
6Faith in Reason
- A better guide than tradition, custom, and
dogmatic faith - Mind as blank slate
- Humankind capable of great feats
- Galileo, Copernicus, Newton
7Natural Law
- Universe is a machine
- Understanding yields control
- Science replaces theology as guide to action
8Republican Virtue
- Perfectibility of the individual
- Duties to God and to nature
- The work ethic
- Mens virtues/ Womens virtues
9Progress
- Continual individual and societal progress toward
perfection - Changing the world to what ought to be
- Revolution as an option
- Commitment to social meliorism (society has an
innate tendency toward improvement and this
tendency may be furthered through conscious human
effort) - Education as the vehicle
10Nationalism
- Allegiance to a nation, not a state
- A new national identity
- Uneasy balance between national government and
local self- determination
11Freedom
- Negative freedom
- Intellectual
- Free from external coercion of church and state
- Political
- Representative government
- Civic
- Freedom to live as one pleases
- Bill of Rights
- Economic
- Laissez-faire economy
- The Wealth of Nations
12Natural Rights / Social Contract Theories
- Hobbes, 1588-1679 Locke, 1632-1704
- Locke describes humans as by Nature, all free,
equal, and independent. - To have natural rights means to act according to
ones will and without external constraint, like
in the state of Nature - Social contract is a hypothetical situation in
which rational human beings agree to limit some
of their liberties and confer power to a
sovereign government. They do so in order to
protect the remaining of their liberties (civil
rights). - Natural rights are inherent, self-evident, and
inalienable.
13Laissez Faire Utilitarianism
- Bentham, 1748-1832 J. S. Mill 1806-1873
- Bentham's criticism Natural rights are simple
nonsense natural and imprescriptible rights,
rhetorical nonsense, nonsense upon stilts. - Mill Freedom is good (in a moral sense) because
it produces happiness. - A civil society is the best arrangement for the
maximization of happiness - Law that limits freedom is a prima facie (i.e.,
unless there is further evidence to the opposite)
moral evil because inhibits happiness.
14Jeffersons Liberal Ideology
- His commitment to happiness (property as a means
to happiness, not an end in itself) - His notion of happiness (reason has to be the
governing force of human appetite) - The exclusion of women and Blacks
- Intellectual freedom (free press, the wall of
separation between church and state, etc.) - Truth is a property of the natural world (waiting
to be discovered by human inquiry) - His political ideal representative republic
composed of educated, informed, and rational
citizens - His conception of government too weak to aid the
wolves yet strong enough to protect the sheep
15Jeffersons Educational Philosophy
- See Jeffersons quotations about education,
available at http//etext.virginia.edu/jefferson/q
uotations/jeff1350.htm
16Jeffersons Plan for Popular Education
Elementary Schools
Grammar Schools
University
Self-Education
17First TierElementary Schools
- Foundation of entire education structure
- Decentralized districts
- Three years of free education
- Screening for future leaders
- Preparing citizens for effective functioning
18Second TierGrammar Schools
- Boarding schools
- Languages, advanced curriculum
- Developing local leadership
- Preparation for university
19Third TierUniversity Education
- Common education from grammar schools allowed for
advanced instruction - Specialization in a science
- Preparation for leadershiplaw, government, the
professions - Education for meritocracy
20Fourth TierSelf-Education
- Lifelong learning as the culmination of
educational aims - Jeffersons support of public libraries
- Knowledge is power knowledge is safety
knowledge is happiness
21Concluding Remarks
- Political economy and ideology influenced early
education processes, inside and outside of
schools - Jeffersons thinking reveals the tensions in
classical liberalism