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Auction archive: Lot number 85

WORTMAN, Tunis (d. 1822). A Treatise Concerning Political Enquiry, and the Liberty of the Press . New York: Printed by George Forman...for the author, 1800.

Auction 21.06.2005
21 Jun 2005
Estimate
US$2,000 - US$3,000
Price realised:
US$3,120
Auction archive: Lot number 85

WORTMAN, Tunis (d. 1822). A Treatise Concerning Political Enquiry, and the Liberty of the Press . New York: Printed by George Forman...for the author, 1800.

Auction 21.06.2005
21 Jun 2005
Estimate
US$2,000 - US$3,000
Price realised:
US$3,120
Beschreibung:

WORTMAN, Tunis (d. 1822). A Treatise Concerning Political Enquiry, and the Liberty of the Press . New York: Printed by George Forman...for the author, 1800. 8 o (208 x 128 mm). (Some minor pale spotting at beginning and end.) Modern calf, black morocco lettering piece. FIRST EDITION of the foremost expression of American libertarian thinking on freedom of speech in its formative stages. Wortman states more fully than any of his fellow Jeffersonian Democrats the case for freedom of expression. Leonard Levy writes: "Tunis Wortman, a New York lawyer who was prominent in Tammany politics, contributed pre-eminently to the emergence of American libertarianism in his book...It is, in a sense, the book that Jefferson did not write, but should have. Devoid of party polemics and of the characteristically American preoccupation with legal and constitutional problems, it is a work of political philosophy that systematically presents the case for freedom of expression...the outstanding characteristics of the book are its philosophic approach and its absolutist theses." From the premise of the Declaration of Independence that the people have the right to dissolve political bonds, Wortman implied an "unlimited right" of individuals and society to express political opinions. For Wortman, a society interested in furthering knowledge or truth must leave speech "entirely unshackled." He held that open debate furthered the ability of society to arrive at the wisest course of action. He argued that the effect of the Alien and Sedition Acts was self-defeating, since coercion could not suppress thought, but only its expression, and so would inevitably lead to a lack of faith in the government, which he viewed as a worse consequence than any breach of peace. Levy concludes: "Wortman's treatise is surely the pre-eminent American classic, because of its scope, fullness, philosophical approach, masterful marshalling of the facts, and uncompromisingly radical view." Cohen 3603; Evans 39150; Leonard Levy, Legacy of Suppression , Cambridge, 1960, pp. 283-89; McCoy, Freedom of the Press W398; Sabin 105514.

Auction archive: Lot number 85
Auction:
Datum:
21 Jun 2005
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

WORTMAN, Tunis (d. 1822). A Treatise Concerning Political Enquiry, and the Liberty of the Press . New York: Printed by George Forman...for the author, 1800. 8 o (208 x 128 mm). (Some minor pale spotting at beginning and end.) Modern calf, black morocco lettering piece. FIRST EDITION of the foremost expression of American libertarian thinking on freedom of speech in its formative stages. Wortman states more fully than any of his fellow Jeffersonian Democrats the case for freedom of expression. Leonard Levy writes: "Tunis Wortman, a New York lawyer who was prominent in Tammany politics, contributed pre-eminently to the emergence of American libertarianism in his book...It is, in a sense, the book that Jefferson did not write, but should have. Devoid of party polemics and of the characteristically American preoccupation with legal and constitutional problems, it is a work of political philosophy that systematically presents the case for freedom of expression...the outstanding characteristics of the book are its philosophic approach and its absolutist theses." From the premise of the Declaration of Independence that the people have the right to dissolve political bonds, Wortman implied an "unlimited right" of individuals and society to express political opinions. For Wortman, a society interested in furthering knowledge or truth must leave speech "entirely unshackled." He held that open debate furthered the ability of society to arrive at the wisest course of action. He argued that the effect of the Alien and Sedition Acts was self-defeating, since coercion could not suppress thought, but only its expression, and so would inevitably lead to a lack of faith in the government, which he viewed as a worse consequence than any breach of peace. Levy concludes: "Wortman's treatise is surely the pre-eminent American classic, because of its scope, fullness, philosophical approach, masterful marshalling of the facts, and uncompromisingly radical view." Cohen 3603; Evans 39150; Leonard Levy, Legacy of Suppression , Cambridge, 1960, pp. 283-89; McCoy, Freedom of the Press W398; Sabin 105514.

Auction archive: Lot number 85
Auction:
Datum:
21 Jun 2005
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
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