
The series opener makes a single, startling claim: the truths the Declaration of Independence calls self-evident were not invented in Philadelphia. They were inherited — refined across more than two thousand years, in more than one civilization, by men who rarely knew one another. Jefferson himself said as much, naming Aristotle, Cicero, Locke, and Sidney as the “elementary books” behind the Declaration. This episode establishes that the Founders were readers before they were revolutionaries, hands the listener the Liberty Test as the analytical instrument for the whole series, traces the golden thread across civilizations from Athens to the Iroquois Confederacy, and gives the strongest opposing arguments — Beard’s economic interpretation, the particularist critique, and the utilitarian challenge — a fair hearing before answering them. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jeffkellick.substack.com
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Why This History Matters Now

Republic or Empire — Where Do We Go From Here?

Libertarians Being Libertarian: After Kentucky

The Aristocracy of Pull — From Smedley Butler to the Equity State
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