
About this book
"Abraham Lincoln was a fatalist who promoted freedom; he was a classical liberal who couched liberalism's greatest deed - emancipation of the slaves - in the unliberal language of divine providence; he was a religious doubter who became a national icon bordering on religion; and he was a rights-oriented liberal who appealed to natural law when confronting slavery"--Provided by publisher.
Subjects
BiographyPhilosophyPolitical and social viewsPresidentsReligionUnited StatesLincoln, abraham, 1809-1865Presidents, united statesPhilosophiePensée politique et socialePrésidentsBiographiesIntellectualismePressureUnited states, history