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  • Conservatism | History, Intellectual Foundations, Examples | Britannica
    Conservatism is a political doctrine that emphasizes the value of traditional institutions and practices and their gradual evolution under conditions of continuity and stability They generally believe that government should be the servant, not the master, of existing ways of life
  • Conservatism - Traditionalism, Hierarchy, Authority | Britannica
    Conservatism - Traditionalism, Hierarchy, Authority: A common way of distinguishing conservatism from both liberalism and radicalism is to say that conservatives reject the optimistic view that human beings can be morally improved through political and social change Conservatives who are Christians sometimes express this point by saying that human beings are guilty of original sin Skeptical
  • Conservatism - Ideology, Politics, Principles | Britannica
    Conservatism - Ideology, Politics, Principles: The Allied victory in World War I resulted in the downfall of four great imperial dynasties—those in Russia, Austria-Hungary, Germany, and Ottoman Turkey—that were the last major bastions of conservatism based on monarchy, landed aristocracy, and an established church After the war, conservative parties became the standard-bearers of
  • Conservatism - Traditionalism, Hierarchy, Authority | Britannica
    Conservatism - Traditionalism, Hierarchy, Authority: Although conservatives sometimes claim philosophers as ancient as Aristotle and Cicero as their forebears, the first explicitly conservative political theorist is generally considered to be Edmund Burke In 1790, when the French Revolution still seemed to promise a bloodless utopia, Burke predicted in his Reflections on the Revolution in
  • Conservatism - 19th Century, Ideology, Burke | Britannica
    Conservatism - 19th Century, Ideology, Burke: The 19th century was in many ways antithetical to conservatism, both as a political philosophy and as a program of particular parties identified with conservative interests The Enlightenment had engendered widespread belief in the possibility of improving the human condition—a belief, that is, in the idea of progress—and a rationalist
  • Liberalism | Definition, History, Facts | Britannica
    Liberalism, political doctrine that takes protecting and enhancing individual freedom to be the central problem of politics Liberals typically believe that government is necessary to protect individuals from being harmed by others, but they also recognize that government itself can pose a threat to liberty
  • Neoconservatism | US Foreign Policy, Conservative Ideology History . . .
    Neoconservatism, variant of the political ideology of conservatism that combines features of traditional conservatism with political individualism and a qualified endorsement of free markets Neoconservatism arose in the United States in the 1970s among intellectuals who shared a dislike of
  • Conservatism - British Politics, Tradition, Monarchy | Britannica
    Conservatism - British Politics, Tradition, Monarchy: At the start of the 20th century, the Conservative Party in Great Britain seemed to stand at the summit of its popularity This ascendancy was temporarily halted by the Liberal victory in the general election of 1906 By this time, however, the Liberals had begun to lose trade-union and working-class supporters to the Labour Party, and the
  • Conservatism - US Politics, Ideology, Principles | Britannica
    Conservatism - US Politics, Ideology, Principles: The perception of the United States as an inherently liberal country began to change in the wake of the New Deal, the economic relief program undertaken by the Democratic administration of Pres Franklin D Roosevelt in 1933 to help raise the country out of the Great Depression This program greatly expanded the federal government’s





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