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dc.contributor.authorEidukienė, Dalia
dc.date.accessioned2019-09-25T09:46:08Z
dc.date.available2019-09-25T09:46:08Z
dc.date.created2014-05-02 09:37
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.issn2029-6339
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/206014
dc.description.abstractThis article deals with the ideas of Benjamin Constant (French: Henri Benjamin Constant de Rebecque, 1767-1830) about the individual, his liberty and his relationship to society. Constant was a Swiss-born French thinker who is considered to be the creator of the19th-century liberalism in both France and Europe. His works can be called a conceptual rebellion against the liberal doctrine which was based on the idea of the social contract and which mistook authority for liberty. In Constant’s opinion, by clearly demonstrating that the principles of representation and separation of powers may turn into despotism and the nation may lose its sovereignty because of a few extremists, the great French Revolution proved the limitations of such political thought and its threat to liberty, i.e. the central concept of liberalism. By employing the historical comparative method, Constant attempted to liberate pre-revolutionary liberal thought from the elements typical of ancient political thinking and argued that reality must be analysed in its historical context because certain phenomena are possible in one era and are totally impossible in another (Constant 1980: 113). Constant did not proclaim new principles of liberalism; instead, he thought it was more important to understand the elementary conditions of social interaction that already exist and have been tested throughout history. He succeeded in summing up the results of earlier developments and drawing conclusions from them that were useful for the future. In this way, Constant overcame the limitations of the 18th-century proto-liberal thought and contributed to the creation of the modern political theory of liberalism.
dc.language.isolit
dc.publisherVilnius Gediminas Technical University
dc.rightsCreative Commons Copyright (CC 2.5)
dc.subjectFreedom
dc.subjectPolitical Communication
dc.subjectSocial Contract
dc.subject.otherEconomic ethics
dc.subject.otherCultural ethics
dc.subject.otherMedia/communication/information ethics
dc.subject.otherMethods of ethics
dc.subject.otherPhilosophical ethics
dc.titlePolitinė Komunikacija [Benjamin Constant]
dc.typeArticle
dc.source.journaltitleSANTALKA: Filosofija, Komunikacija
dc.source.volume20
dc.source.issue1
dc.source.beginpage15
dc.source.endpage20
dcterms.accessRightsopen access
refterms.dateFOA2019-09-25T09:46:08Z
ge.collectioncodeAA
ge.dataimportlabelGlobethics object
ge.identifier.legacyglobethics:5720942
ge.identifier.permalinkhttps://www.globethics.net/gel/5720942
ge.journalyear2012
ge.lastmodificationdate2019-02-11 18:31
ge.lastmodificationuseradmin@novalogix.ch
ge.submissions1
ge.peerreviewedyes
ge.placeofpublicationLithuania
ge.setnameGlobeEthicsLib
ge.setspecglobeethicslib
ge.submitter.emailjanakiamirthalingam@gmail.com
ge.submitter.nameAmirthalingam, Janakiraman
ge.submitter.userid1800959
ge.subtitleBenjamino Constanto Atvejis [The Antinomies of Liberty and Popular Sovereignty]


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