![]() 作者:Alexis de Tocqueville 出版社: Library of America 原作名: De la démocratie en Amérique 译者:Arthur Goldhammer 出版年: 2004-2-9 页数: 928 定价: USD 35.00 装帧: Hardcover 丛书: Library of America ISBN: 9781931082549 内容简介 · · · · · ·Alexis de Tocqueville, a young aristocratic French lawyer, came to the United States in 1831 to study its penitentiary systems. His nine-month visit and subsequent reading and reflection resulted in Democracy in America (1835–40), a landmark masterpiece of political observation and analysis. Tocqueville vividly describes the unprecedented social equality he found in America a... 目录 · · · · · ·Introduction p. 3The Outward Configuration of North America p. 21 On the Point of Departure and Its Importance for the Future of the Anglo-Americans p. 31 Social State of the Anglo-Americans p. 52 On the Principle of Popular Sovereignty in America p. 62 Necessity of Studying What Happens in Particular States Before Speaking of the Government of the Union p. 66 · · · · · ·() Introduction p. 3 The Outward Configuration of North America p. 21 On the Point of Departure and Its Importance for the Future of the Anglo-Americans p. 31 Social State of the Anglo-Americans p. 52 On the Principle of Popular Sovereignty in America p. 62 Necessity of Studying What Happens in Particular States Before Speaking of the Government of the Union p. 66 On Judicial Power in the United States and Its Effect on Political Society p. 111 On Political Judgment in the United States p. 120 On the Federal Constitution p. 126 Why It Is Strictly Accurate to Say That in the United States It Is the People Who Govern p. 197 Parties in the United States p. 198 On Freedom of the Press in the United States p. 205 On Political Association in the United States p. 215 On the Government of Democracy in America p. 224 What Are the Real Advantages to American Society of Democratic Government? p. 264 On the Omnipotence of the Majority in the United States and Its Effects p. 283 On That Which Tempers the Tyranny of the Majority in the United States p. 301 On the Principal Causes That Tend to Maintain the Democratic Republic in the United States p. 319 Some Considerations Concerning the Present State and Probable Future of the Three Races That Inhabit the Territory of the United States p. 365 Preface p. 479 Influence of Democracy on the Evolution of the American Intellect On the Philosophical Method of the Americans p. 483 On the Principal Source of Beliefs Among Democratic Peoples p. 489 Why the Americans Show More Aptitude and Taste for General Ideas Than Their English Forefathers p. 494 Why the Americans Have Never Been as Passionate as the French About General Ideas in Politics p. 499 How Religion Uses Democratic Instincts in the United States p. 501 On the Progress of Catholicism in the United States p. 510 What Makes the Mind of Democratic Peoples Receptive to Pantheism p. 512 How Democracy Suggests to the Americans the Idea of Man's Infinite Perfectibility p. 514 How the Example of the Americans Does Not Prove That a Democratic People Can Have No Aptitude for Science, Literature, or the Arts p. 516 Why Americans Devote Themselves More to the Practical Applications of Science Than to the Theory p. 522 In What Spirit Americans Cultivate the Arts p. 530 Why Americans Build Such Insignificant and Such Great Monuments at the Same Time p. 536 The Literary Aspect of Democratic Centuries p. 538 On the Literary Industry p. 544 Why the Study of Greek and Latin Is Particularly Useful in Democratic Societies p. 545 How American Democracy Has Changed the English Language p. 547 On Some Sources of Poetry in Democratic Nations p. 554 Why American Writers and Orators Are Often Bombastic p. 561 Some Observations on the Theater of Democratic Peoples p. 563 On Certain Tendencies Peculiar to Historians in Democratic Centuries p. 569 On Parliamentary Eloquence in the United States p. 574 Influence of Democracy on the Sentiments of the Americans Why Democratic Peoples Show a More Ardent and Enduring Love of Equality Than of Liberty p. 581 On Individualism in Democratic Countries p. 585 How Individualism Is More Pronounced at the End of a Democratic Revolution Than at Any Other Time p. 588 How Americans Combat Individualism with Free Institutions p. 590 On the Use That Americans Make of Association in Civil Life p. 595 On the Relation Between Associations and Newspapers p. 600 Relations Between Civil Associations and Political Associations p. 604 How Americans Combat Individualism with the Doctrine of Self-Interest Properly Understood p. 610 How Americans Apply the Doctrine of Self-Interest Properly Understood in the Matter of Religion p. 614 On the Taste for Material Well-Being in America p. 617 On the Particular Effects of the Love of Material Gratifications in Democratic Centuries p. 620 Why Certain Americans Exhibit Such Impassioned Spiritualism p. 623 Why Americans Seem So Restless in the Midst of Their Well-Being p. 625 How the Taste for Material Gratifications Is Combined in America with Love of Liberty and Concern About Public Affairs p. 629 How Religious Beliefs Sometimes Divert the American Soul Toward Immaterial Gratifications p. 633 How Excessive Love of Well-Being Can Impair It p. 638 How, in Times of Equality and Doubt, It Is Important to Set Distant Goals for Human Actions p. 639 Why All Respectable Occupations Are Reputed Honorable Among Americans p. 642 Why Nearly All Americans Are Inclined to Enter Industrial Occupations p. 644 How Industry Could Give Rise to an Aristocracy p. 649 Influence of Democracy on Mores Properly So-Called How Mores Become Milder as Conditions Become More Equal p. 655 How Democracy Simplifies and Eases Habitual Relations Among Americans p. 660 Why Americans Are So Slow to Take Offense in Their Country and So Quick to Take Offense in Ours p. 663 Consequences of the Three Previous Chapters p. 667 How Democracy Modifies Relations Between Servant and Master p. 669 How Democratic Institutions and Mores Tend to Raise Prices and Shorten the Terms of Leases p. 679 Influence of Democracy on Wages p. 682 Influence of Democracy on the Family p. 685 Raising Girls in the United States p. 692 How the Traits of the Girl Can Be Divined in the Wife p. 695 How Equality of Conditions Helps to Maintain Good Morals in America p. 698 How the Americans Understand the Equality of Man and Woman p. 705 How Equality Naturally Divides the Americans into a Multitude of Small Private Societies p. 709 Some Reflections on American Manners p. 711 On the Gravity of Americans and Why It Does Not Prevent Them from Acting Rashly p. 715 Why the National Vanity of the Americans Is More Restless and Argumentative Than That of the English p. 719 How Society in the United States Seems Both Agitated and Monotonous p. 722 On Honor in the United States and in Democratic Societies p. 725 Why There Are So Many Ambitious Men and So Few Great Ambitions in the United States p. 738 On Place-Hunting in Certain Democratic Nations p. 745 Why Great Revolutions Will Become Rare p. 747 Why Democratic Peoples Naturally Desire Peace and Democratic Armies Naturally Desire War p. 761 Which Class in Democratic Armies Is the Most Warlike and Revolutionary p. 768 What Makes Democratic Armies Weaker Than Other Armies at the Start of a Campaign but More Formidable in Protracted Warfare p. 772 On Discipline in Democratic Armies p. 777 Some Remarks on War in Democratic Societies p. 779 On the Influence that Democratic Ideas and Sentiments Exert on Political Society Equality Naturally Gives Men a Taste for Free Institutions p. 787 Why the Ideas of Democratic Peoples About Government Naturally Favor the Concentration of Power p. 789 How the Sentiments of Democratic Peoples Accord with Their Ideas to Bring About a Concentration of Power p. 793 Concerning Certain Particular and Accidental Causes That Either Lead a Democratic People to Centralize Power or Divert Them From It p. 797 How Sovereign Power in Today's European Nations Is Increasing, Although Sovereigns Are Less Stable p. 803 What Kind of Despotism Democratic Nations Have to Fear p. 816 Continuation of the Preceding Chapters p. 822 General View of the Subject p. 831 Tocqueville's Notes p. 835 Translator's Note p. 873 Chronology p. 878 Note on the Texts p. 907 Notes p. 909 Index p. 925 Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. 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实在太喜欢了
原来都是有因果关系的。
果然不负我忘。
听说很久,却一直没有看的一本书