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Unit 1: Sources of the Democratic Tradition 10.1 Students relate the moral and ethical principles in ancient Greek and Roman philosophy, in Judaism, and in Christianity to the development of Western political thought. 1. Analyze the similarities and differences in Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman views of law, reason and faith, and duties of the individual. 2. Trace the development of the Western political ideas of the rule of law and illegitimacy of tyranny, using selections from Plato's Republic and Aristotle's Politics. 3. Consider the influence of the U.S. Constitution on political systems in the contemporary world. Textbook Readings: Chapter 1 Section 1-5. Section 1: The Greek Roots of Democracy Reading Key Terms and Focus Questions: City-state Democracy Monarchy Tyrant Sparta Legislature Athens Pericles Jury Socrates Plato Plato’s Republic Aristotle Aristotle’s Politics 1. Athens and Sparta were both Greek city-states; however they were very different. Explain. 2. What process took city-states from monarchy to aristocracy and, in Athens, to democracy? 3. What progress did the Greeks under Pericles make towards a democratic government? 4. How do the ideas of Ancient Greece contribute to the development of democratic values in the modern world? 5. What did Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, think of Democracy? 6. How did the ideas of the Ancient Greeks spread beyond Greece during the Hellenistic Age? Section 2: The Roman Republic and Empire Reading Key Terms and Focus Questions: Republic Senate Consul Tribune Dictator Veto Plebians Carthage Julius Caesar Augustus Caesar Pax Romana 1. Describe/explain Rome’s form of government: a Republic. 2. Explain how the Romans had examples of checks and balances within their system of government. 3. How did the Roman Republic become an empire? 4. Which lasting principles of law did the Romans develop? 5. What cultures contributed to Greco-Roman civilization? Section 3: Principles of Judaism Reading Key Terms and Focus Questions: Jerusalem Monotheistic Abraham Covenant Moses Sabbath Prophet Ethics diaspora 1. What role did migration play in the history of the Israelites? 2. How did the Jews’ beliefs differ from those of other nearby people? 3. What is the source of basic moral laws that Jews must obey? 4. How did the scattering of Jewish people begin? Section 4: Rise of Christianity Jesus Apostle Messiah Paul Tolerance Clergy 1. What roles did love, justice, and service play in the teachings of Jesus? 2. What factors contributed to the spread of Christianity? 3. How did the Christian church exert control over Europeans during the Middle Ages? 4. Where did the principles of the Judeo-Christian traditions come from? Section 5: Democratic Developments in England Reading Key Terms and Focus Questions: Feudalism Common law William the Conqueror Absolute monarch Henry II Oliver Cromwell Habeas Corpus Limited Monarchy 1. What new practices did strong monarchs introduce in England? 2. How did English Parliament limit the power of the monarch? 3. What were the causes and consequences of the English Civil War? 4. What are the key principles of the Magna Carta, Petition of Right, and the English Bill of Rights? Citystate Monarch y Sparta Athens Democra cy Tyrant Legislatu re Pericles Jury Socrates Plato Aristotle Roman Law Republic Consul Dictator Justinian Julius Caesar Monothe istic Covenan t Clergy Hierarch y Natural l