Chapter 1
Classical Republicanism
Natural Rights Theory
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
100

This sets forth the structure and power of a government

What is a Constitution?

100

A citizen that does things for the good of the community has this.

What is Civic Virtue?

100

The inalienable rights as stated by John Locke

What are life, liberty, estate?

100

The event that brought about a new focus on an individual's relationship with god and religion. 

What is the Reformation?

100

The idea that everyone in a country must follow the same laws.

What is Rule of Law?

200
The type of government that has a singular ruler.

What is a Monarchy?

200
The political Ideas that placed then needs of people as a community above individual liberty.

What is Classical Republicanism?

200

The idea that the political power rests with the people.

What is Popular Sovereignty?

200

The invention that allowed people across the world to read and interpret the bible.

What is the Printing Press?

200

The English document from 1215 whose principles were rule of law, basic rights, and government by contract.

What is the Magna Carta?

300

A representative government that typically has democratic values.

What is a Republic?

300

The belief that the youth should be educated to learn civic virtue and proper habits good for society

What is Moral Education?

300

The purpose of government in Natural Rights Theory.

What is to protect individual rights?

300

The new system that allowed people to choose their own jobs and business.

What is Capitalism?

300

This right allows people to prove their innocence to a group of their peers.

What is Trial by Jury?

400

A form of government where citizens directly participate in government

What is a democracy?

400

In a classical republican society, this is the most important thing.

What is the common good?

400

The founder of Natural Rights Theory.

Who is John Locke?

400

This event lead to the use of science and study to influence government.

What is the Enlightenment?

400

An order for an official to explain why a person is being held.

What is a Writ of Habeas Corpus?

500

This can only be changed with the consent of the people, limits the power of government, establishes the responsibility of the government, and sets for the rights of citizens

What is a Higher Law?

500

This is where the ideas of Classical Republicanism originated.

What are the Ancient Greeks and Romans?
500

The ability to change a government if it does not protect the rights of the people.

What is Right to Revolution?

500

The system popular in the Middle Ages that was very strictly hierarchical and people had very little social mobility.

What is Feudalism?

500

"Let the precedent stand"

What is stare decisis?

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