The dominant ideas of the nineteenth century and their impact on the state

New York: Columbia University Press. Edited by D. Mervyn Jones (1996)
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Abstract

This work's thesis is that since the French Revolution, the dominant ideas of liberty, equality and nationality have been given a meaning quite different from traditional liberal interpretations. Liberty, for instance, has been taken to mean that all power is nominally exercised by the people; this difference, it argues, is the cause of all the sufferings of the age.

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