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- Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
11: ...Randian [[hero]], a man whose ability and independence leads others to reject him, but who perseveres ...
19: ...cousin in which she claims to have been present when Ayn chose the name Rand from a typewriter.
22: ...]'' in [[1932]] to [[Universal Studios]]. Rand then wrote the play, ''[[The Night of January 16th]]''...
24: ...ce from the [[Italy|Italian]] government under [[Benito Mussolini]]. These films were re-edited into a...
28: ...and launched the [[Objectivism|Objectivist]] movement to promote her philosophy. - Civil rights (27169 bytes)
1: [[Image:LBJMLK.jpg|thumb|250px|right|President Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1964.]]
2: ...nd advocating new laws to limit the effect of current discriminations.
4: ...(with forty-five countries as signatories), which encompass both human rights and civil liberties.
8: ... association between a bundle of rights and 'citizenship'. The term [[Human rights]] refers to a broad...
10: ...rights attach to people by virute of their [[citizenship]] of a [[state]]. <br> - John Locke (14749 bytes)
3: ...and [[George Berkeley]]. Locke is perhaps most often contrasted with [[Thomas Hobbes]].
6: ... He found reading modern philosophers, such as [[Rene Descartes]], more interesting than the classical...
8: ...aftesbury]], who had come to Oxford seeking treatment for a liver infection. Cooper was impressed with...
10: ...es, under the tutelage of [[Thomas Sydenham]]. Sydenham had a major impact on Locke's natural philosop...
12: ...ftesbury to undergo an operation (then life-threatening itself) to remove the cyst. Shaftesbury surviv... - Civics (8684 bytes)
1: ...'Civics''' is the science of [[comparative government]] and means of administering [[public trust]]s -...
3: ... [[United States Constitution]] is upheld by citizens who must, at least, know what it is.
5: ...between the West and the East, and two very different concepts of right and [[justice]] and [[ethics]]...
7: ...t even on the stronger ones. Thus [[world government]] is itself properly a civic problem.
9: ...concilably different. This extreme advocacy of decentralization is hardly uncommon, and leads to the m...
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