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Posted

All of these various influences (Calvinism, the Iroquois confederation, etc, etc) can be found in the thinking of the founding fathers. Everyone sees a little of what they want to see. Liberal bleeding hearts see respect for native American governance; religious righties see hardcore protestantism.

 

But the one giant who towers above all others combined? Montesquieu.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montesquieu

Posted
35 minutes ago, The Frankish Reich said:

All of these various influences (Calvinism, the Iroquois confederation, etc, etc) can be found in the thinking of the founding fathers. Everyone sees a little of what they want to see. Liberal bleeding hearts see respect for native American governance; religious righties see hardcore protestantism.

 

But the one giant who towers above all others combined? Montesquieu.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montesquieu

Agree on part 1. 
 

Part 2, Montesquieu - Interesting, and someone I never knew of. This is the rare thread on PPP where I’m actually learning something. 

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Posted
51 minutes ago, The Frankish Reich said:

All of these various influences (Calvinism, the Iroquois confederation, etc, etc) can be found in the thinking of the founding fathers. Everyone sees a little of what they want to see. Liberal bleeding hearts see respect for native American governance; religious righties see hardcore protestantism.

 

But the one giant who towers above all others combined? Montesquieu.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montesquieu

 

May as well throw in Rousseau and see what comes out!

 

I put Trumpy's thoughts on Calvinism and its influence on the Revolution into ChatGpt. It laid out about a dozen different historians from four or five different schools of thought on the subject, and their books.

 

Best use of Chatgpt I've ever come across 

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Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, Coffeesforclosers said:

 

Are you sure about Calvin's influence specifically?  I'm curious, since the 13 Colonies were a haven for Protestant non- conformers and Calvinists weren't really known for their pluralism (but then again, no one really was at the time).

 

What parts did they like?

 

 

 

 

"Calvinism"you're correct. Which is more specifically a doctrine of no free will or predestination in layman's terms within Christianity 

 

But Calvin was a pivotal part of the reformation that questioned the churches authority, along with martin Luther which in turn created the fertile ground for not necessarily establishing one church authority in the new colonial world and their discussions about a new government etc

 

They were a core reason for not having an establishment of religion in the Constitution etc

 

 

It's obviously way more nuanced than this but this is like 1 % of the cliff notes

 

But the larger report remains. The Iroquois had literally nothing to do with any of this. 

 

There was temporary alliances and or treaties etc. 

Edited by Kelly to Allen
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