having to do with rural, farming, or agricultural way of life
AnswerRepublican Agrarianism (or an Agrarianism Republican's belief) was coined by Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson envisaged a world filled with small farms all supporting each other in an informal, semi-socialist setting. This would be supplemented by Republican legislation. This, needless to say, was considered very Anti-Federalist.
Agrarianism, sectarianism, Arianism.
Agrarianism
Thomas Jefferson
Agra, agrarian, agrarianism, agrarismo, agravic
Jefferson believed in strict limits and agrarianism as far as the national government was concerned.
AnswerRepublican Agrarianism (or an Agrarianism Republican's belief) was coined by Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson envisaged a world filled with small farms all supporting each other in an informal, semi-socialist setting. This would be supplemented by Republican legislation. This, needless to say, was considered very Anti-Federalist.
The Whig party stood for liberalism, economic nationalism, agrarianism, and pro-federalism. Four of the US Presidents were of the Whig Party.
An agrarian party is any of a range of political parties, mostly in Eastern Europe, which advocate agrarianism - an equal or appropriate distribution of land.
"agrarian" means farming so an "agrarian economy" is an economy based on income from agricultural produce and the land.the actual agrarian means Agrarianism has two common meanings. The first meaning refers to a social philosophy or political philosophy which values rural society as superior to urban society, the independent farmer as superior to the paid worker, and sees farming as a way of life that can shape the ideal social values.[1]It stresses the superiority of a simpler rural life as opposed to the complexity of city life, with its banks and factories.refer: wikipedia
Karl Marx was concerned with the ownership of the means of production. He theorized that all of recorded history is a history of class struggles. The classes are composed of on the one hand, the owners and controllers of the means of production and on the other, the people who actually work within those means. There is a constant conflict between these two classes which resolve themselves in the form of changes in the mode of production, i.e. agrarianism into capitalism.
Thomas Jefferson was against the establishment of the First Bank of the United States because he believed it was unconstitutional. He argued that the power to create a national bank was not explicitly granted to the federal government in the Constitution. Additionally, Jefferson believed that the existence of a national bank would give too much economic and financial control to a few wealthy individuals, undermining the principles of democracy and agrarianism that he advocated for.