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Old 01-10-2010, 09:35 PM
Craig
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Billybob View Post
My reference to the Federalist papers was not an endorsement of any particular view or the view of any particular man. It is the best collection of essay’s in which the authors during the course of their arguments intentionally and inadvertently pro and con their own positions and the positions of their political adversaries. Their value is as an insight to these arguments when they took place, not as reinterpreted by later historians.

Also interesting; but not nearly as cohesive a discourse; is the compilation of Borden’s Anti-Federalist Papers his attempt to juxtapose arguments in contemporaneous relevance. Unfortunately they where not authored as direct counterpoints but actually collected and arraigned almost 200 years later by Morton Borden.
I agree, they are worth reading to gain some insight to the thoughts of folks involved with drafting the constitution. It's unfortunate that the actual congressional sesions did not leave a record. We now tend to think of the founding fathers as having a unified vision, it's interesting to also see the disagreements.
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