Edmund Burke
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Author of Reflections on the French Revolution
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Burke
Introduced the concept of Burkean conservatism during the French Revolution
Emphasized original contract over social contract
Defends the traditional institutions inherited from ancestors, seeing in them the manifestation of the original contract that has been fundamentally preserved for many years, and advocates for their defense and inheritance by future generations Political philosophy
Similar to what he mentioned in I often think that people are too complacent about the "Test of Time."
Naturally developed and grown invisible law (Common Law), morality, or visible monarchy, aristocracy, or church system, there is a statute of limitations that cannot be easily altered by a generation in terms of their intellectual abilities
Critics of social contract theory
Supported the American Revolution movement, but opposed the subsequent French Revolution
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Burke
Social contract
"Even if you try to claim the Right to revolution so easily, the people are not that smart, and they will just be destroyed." Previous companies, interviews and appearances related to oneself.icon
In Reflections on the French Revolution, he states the following:
"You may have overthrown the monarch, but you have not recovered your freedom."
"Indeed, the French people became sovereign, but at the same time they became slaves who did not know when they would be killed."