Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Selected Works

2015

Peter J. Aschenbrenner

Thomas Jefferson

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Thomas Jefferson’S First Inaugural Address In Mr Text Format (March 4, 1801) With Observations On The Tyranny Of The Majority And Tyranny Of The Minority, Peter Aschenbrenner Aug 2015

Thomas Jefferson’S First Inaugural Address In Mr Text Format (March 4, 1801) With Observations On The Tyranny Of The Majority And Tyranny Of The Minority, Peter Aschenbrenner

Peter J. Aschenbrenner

Our Constitutional Logic presents the 1,724 words of Thomas Jefferson’s First Inaugural Address, delivered March 4, 1801. The table annexed hereto presents this work in MR Text format. For OCL’s present purpose TJ’s invocation of TOM-TOM – the mathematical logic which supplies no convenient repose between the tyranny of the majority and the tyranny of the minority – is drawn to the reader’s attention.


Table Annexed To Article: Thomas Jefferson’S First Inaugural Address In Mr Text Format (March 4, 1801) With Observations On The Tyranny Of The Majority And Tyranny Of The Minority,, Peter J. Aschenbrenner Jul 2015

Table Annexed To Article: Thomas Jefferson’S First Inaugural Address In Mr Text Format (March 4, 1801) With Observations On The Tyranny Of The Majority And Tyranny Of The Minority,, Peter J. Aschenbrenner

Peter J. Aschenbrenner

Our Constitutional Logic presents the 1,724 words of Thomas Jefferson’s First Inaugural Address, delivered March 4, 1801. The table annexed hereto presents this work in MR Text format. For OCL’s present purpose TJ’s invocation of TOM-TOM – the mathematical logic which supplies no convenient repose between the tyranny of the majority and the tyranny of the minority – is drawn to the reader’s attention.


Table Annexed To Article: Jefferson’S Manual Of Parliamentary Practice (1801), Peter J. Aschenbrenner Dec 2014

Table Annexed To Article: Jefferson’S Manual Of Parliamentary Practice (1801), Peter J. Aschenbrenner

Peter J. Aschenbrenner

In 1801 Thomas Jefferson published his “Manual of Parliamentary Practice, Composed Originally for the Use of the Senate of the United States,” which which OCL has keyed in from the first edition, in 58,277 words. With 98 cross references to John Hatsell’s Precedents of Proceedings (Vol. 2, 2nd ed., 1785) which Our Constitutional Logic has produced in MR Text Format at John Hatsell’s Precedents of Proceedings (Vol. 2, 2nd ed., 1785) Extracted for Comparison With The Standing Orders of the Philadelphia Convention, 2 OCL 136_2, Jefferson pays his debt to Hatsell whose interest in parliamentary science is, by comparison, antiquarian. …