“Common sense” is something that we hear a lot these days. President Donald Trump promised to bring common sense back to America, and we are reminded many times each day of the common-sense actions being taken.
Robert Curry at The Blaze calls the actions of the Trump administration a “common-sense revolution” – something that “may be precisely what patriotic Americans have longed for – and what America has long needed.”
Because common sense is the key to
understanding America’s original design at every level, America was long known
as “The Common Sense Nation.” Now, President Trump and his “common-sense
revolution” might succeed in making America the common-sense nation once again.
Unalienable rights and self-evident truths
are the core ideas of the American founding. Those ideas are also the core
ideas of a philosophical school known as “common-sense realism,” inspired by
Adam Smith, Thomas Reid, and other representatives of the Scottish Enlightenment.
In the words of Arthur Herman, “Common Sense Realism was virtually the official
creed of the American Republic …” As historian Allen Guelzo explained in “The
American Mind,” his indispensable college lecture series, “before the Civil
War, every major collegiate intellectual was a disciple of Scottish
common-sense realism.”
The founders were true revolutionaries,
believing that the people were capable of self-rule by virtue of their common
sense.
America’s founders were guided by the
ideas and the thinking of the common-sense realists. Jefferson, Madison, and
Hamilton, especially, were thoroughly trained in common-sense realism by their
teachers, who brought those ideas and that manner of thinking from Scotland to
America.
Today, the centrality of Scottish
common-sense realism to the founding of our nation and to its ongoing sense of
purpose is all but unknown. The founders would be astonished by our ignorance
of the men who inspired their work. Admittedly, it has been a struggle – for more
than a century, American academia has labored to obliterate the memory of what
was once known by virtually every American.
Of course, academia has also been working
hard to destroy “common sense” in its ordinary usage, too, insisting that men
and women are arbitrarily designated categories and that the imperative of
every English professor is to support violent insurgency….
The founders’ wild and crazy idea was that
the people are sovereign. At the time, this construction was a contradiction in
terms. The monarch was the sovereign. To say that the American people are
sovereign was to say that the American people would rule and that government in
America would be the agent of the people. Talk about turning the world upside
down!
The founders were true revolutionaries,
believing that the people were capable of self-rule by virtue of their common
sense….
It certainly feels as if we are now
engaged in a titanic struggle to determine America’s future. Perhaps the best
way to understand the meaning of that struggle is to see it as an effort to
restore rule by the common sense of the American people. President Trump and
his common-sense revolution may be precisely what patriotic Americans have
longed for – and what America has long needed.
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