The Preamble comes after the Introduction. Curiously, the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence has been known as the Preamble, whereas the first paragraph of the US Constitution is known as the Preamble.
inevitable
By including the word "necessary" in the first paragraph.
Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence during the Enlightenment Age. During this time, peoples were not changing their beliefs, but they were changing their attitudes. After you read paragraph one, you should notice that he mentions "Powers of the earth" which are the stars, moon, sun, trees, etc., and he mentions "Laws of Nature" which are laws that are entitled to men by God. So the answer to your question would be science and reason.
Answer: Apex Quiz 1.2.4 Makes a revolt against Britain seem inescapable Hope this helped :)
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Which document is echoed by the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence?
property
When Jefferson was writing the Declaration, he and the committee was against slavery and the king's support for the slave trade. The paragraph that condemned the act was eventually removed because South Carolina and Georgia objected and forced them to drop the paragraph.
Thomas was special because he was 3rd president and he wrote the Decleration of Indipendince.
Jefferson gave a philosophy of government by John Locke for the Declaration of Independence. It wasn't reasons, but established a type of thinking.
oh yeah
The Preamble comes after the Introduction. Curiously, the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence has been known as the Preamble, whereas the first paragraph of the US Constitution is known as the Preamble.
The beginning of the Declaration of Independence is called the Introduction. This is unlike the US Constitution, where the opening paragraph is called the Preamble.
Governments exist to protect the people who created them :)
he had slaves but wanted to end slavery when they were writing the declaration of independence. unfortunately his paragraph about slavery was not included.
The words Jefferson wrote show that his thinking was greatly influenced by john Locke. In fact, a passage in the second paragraph of the Declaration clearly was inspired by Locke's ideas about natural rights in Two Treatises of Government.