Comparing Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points Speech And League Of Nations

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The idea of utopianism is very closely linked to the liberal notion and whether liberal ideas are utopian or not has been debatable issue mainly among realists1, in this essay I am going to examine the phenomenon and eventualy try to provide a possible reason for this. I will start with introduction to history and origins of liberalism, then for better understanding explain the concept of the utopianism and how can utopian though be recognized. In the main body I will introduce key aspects of liberalism, mainly Woodrow Wilson´s Fourteen Points speech and League of Nations, clarify their importance in liberalism and discuss two points of their content - Economics Freedom (also known as Free Trade or Laissez-faire) and Reduce of Military Powers (Disarment). These two points I will closely analyze from liberal/utopian view as well as critical view. In the second part of main body I will focus on John Rawls´s book The Law of Peoples, which is about peoples, …show more content…

After all of this, and even more, some kind of revolution was needed and that is the time when liberalism “came on the scene”. Liberalism is derrived from the latin word “liber” that means free and according to the dictionary website the definition of liberalism is “a political or social philosophy advocating the freedom of the individual, parliamentary systems of government, nonviolent modification of political, social, or economic institutions to assure unrestricted development in all spheres of human endeavor, and governmental guarantees of individual rights and civil liberties.”2 That is to say, freedom, the base of this school of thought, is essential not only in the individal sphere or political principles but also in the areas surrounding us as well as in our everyday