Thursday, November 28, 2019
Abstractions in PowerWriting essays
Abstractions in PowerWriting essays    There are many abstractions in the Declaration of       Independence. These abstractions such as: rights, freedom, liberty and      happiness have become the foundations of American society and have       helped to shape the "American Identity." Power, another abstraction       that reoccurs in all the major parts of the Declaration of       Independence plays an equally important role in shaping "America       identity." One forgets the abstraction of power, because it appears in       relation to other institutions: the legislature, the King, the earth,       and the military. The abstraction of power sets the tone of the       Declaration, and shapes the colonists conception of government and       society. Power in the Declaration of Independence flows from distinct       bodies within society such as the King, the legislature, the military,               The Oxford English Dictionary defines power as, "the ability       to do or effect something or anything, or to act upon a person or       thing" (OED 2536). Throughout the ages according to the dictionary the       word power has connoted similar meanings. In 1470 the word power meant       to have strength and the ability to do something, "With all thair       strang *poweir" (OED 2536) Nearly three hundred years later in 1785       the word power carried the same meaning of control, strength, and      force, "power to produce an effect, supposes power not to produce it;       otherwise it is not power but necessity" (OED 2536). This definition       explains how the power government or social institutions rests in       their ability to command people, rocks, colonies to do something they       otherwise would not do. To make the people pay taxes. To make the       rocks form into a fence. To make the colonists honor the King. The       colonialists adopt this interpretation of power. They see power as a       cruel force that has wedded them to a King who has "a history of     ...     
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