All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #3 : Influencing Philosophies
The Spirit of the Laws was written by __________.
Charles de Montesquieu
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Hobbes
John Locke
Voltaire
Charles de Montesquieu
Charles de Montesquieu was a French, Enlightenment-era philosopher who greatly influenced the Constitutional Framers and the nature of the Constitution itself. In his The Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu advocated for the separation of power into three branches of government, in order to prevent a democracy from descending into an autocracy or a monarchy.
Example Question #5 : Influencing Philosophies
The idea that legitimate government stems only from an agreed social contract with the people is most often attributed to which Enlightenment-era philosopher?
Immanuel Kant
Jean Jacques-Rousseau
Adam Smith
Charles de Montesquieu
Voltaire
Jean Jacques-Rousseau
The Social Contract is a series of essays, written by Jean Jacques-Rousseau in the eighteenth century. Its primary argument is that only the people have the absolute right to govern, and a leader can only assume this right if agreed upon by a majority of the people. Rousseau’s writings were very influential for the Constitutional Framers.
Example Question #4 : Influencing Philosophies
The idea that the rights and protection of the nation is more important than the rights and protection of the individual is called __________.
exclusionary rule
cloture
theocracy
statism
popular sovereignty
statism
According to statism, the rights of the individual are secondary to the rights and protection of the nation as a whole. Although the supreme right of the individual is supposed to be an established and guaranteed theory behind the formation of American politics and government, statism has taken on increased importance in recent years.
Example Question #2 : Influencing Philosophies
Which of these Enlightenment-Era philosophers wrote The Leviathan?
Thomas Hobbes
Jean Jacque Rousseau
John Locke
Voltaire
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Hobbes
The Leviathan was written by Thomas Hobbes in the seventeenth century. It can be seen as the philosophical foil for John Locke’s Two Treatises on Government. In The Leviathan, Hobbes argue that human beings are naturally belligerent and inclined toward aggressive competition and self-interest. He believed that, due to the defects of human nature, the best form of government was an absolute ruler, who could constrain the chaos that would ultimately ensue in a free and democratic society.
Example Question #8 : Influencing Philosophies
What did the French philosopher, Montesquieu, primarily contribute to the United States Constitution?
A bicameral legislature
A strong executive
Freedom of the press
The Bill of Rights
Separation of powers
Separation of powers
Montesquieu was a French Enlightenment-Era philosopher whose writings greatly influenced the Founding Fathers. Most notably he argued determinedly for a separation of powers in any democratic government to ensure that no one part of the government could become despotic.
Example Question #5 : Influencing Philosophies
Laissez-faire economics are best described as __________.
a free and competitive market devoid of government interference
an economic system where the government actively works to promote the interests of the working class
an economic system where the government protects the interests of the national economy by establishing tariffs and other import restrictions
a socialist system where everyone shares equally in production
a mercantilist system focused on import and export balance
a free and competitive market devoid of government interference
Laissez-faire economics is a system of economic practice where the market is entirely free and completely devoid of government interference. It long had an ideological impact on the formation of the American economy, but is very far removed from the type of economy that America has at the present.
Example Question #6 : Influencing Philosophies
Which of these American politicians was most notably influenced by the writings of John Locke?
Harry Truman
Thomas Jefferson
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Andrew Jackson
Alexander Hamilton
Thomas Jefferson
John Locke was an English Enlightenment-Era philosopher who famously wrote two treatises on government. His beliefs that there were certain inalienable rights granted to all individuals—to life, liberty, and property—were very influential over many of the American Founding Fathers. In particular, Thomas Jefferson based many of his writings and political opinions on John Locke’s philosophies, as can be seen, for example, in his own writing that all men have the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
Example Question #21 : Ap Us Government
The Social Contract is the work of which Enlightenment-era philosopher?
Voltaire
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Hobbes
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Machiavelli
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
The Social Contract states that the only legitimate right to govern comes from a mandate of the people. It was written by Jean-Jacques Rousseau and greatly influenced the American Founding Fathers.
Example Question #22 : Ap Us Government
Which of the following philosophers greatly influenced the colonists’ views on the role of government?
Martin Heidegger
John Locke
John Stewart Mill
John Dewey
Karl Marx
John Locke
John Locke is often considered the grandfather of the American constitution. His ideas on natural rights of life, liberty, and property and limited government are ideas that inspired the Founders. Other philosophers in the question came later, and were not specifically tied to early constitutional framers.
Example Question #23 : Ap Us Government
Natural law, according to John Locke, gives individuals the right to life, liberty, and __________.
free association
moral government
anarchy
pursuit of Happiness
property
property
John Locke wrote that man was endowed with the natural rights of life, liberty, and property. Thomas Jefferson changed it to Pursuit of Happiness when he wrote the Declaration of Independence.