EXAM 2026/2027 | US Constitution | Grade A 100% Correct |
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[Section 1: Philosophical Foundations & Revolutionary Documents (Q1-14)]
Q1. John Locke argued that individuals possess natural rights to life, liberty, and
property in a state of nature that is mostly cooperative rather than warlike. Which
concept best describes Locke's view of government legitimacy?
A. Government derives absolute power from divine right
B. Government exists by irrevocable surrender of all individual rights
C. Government legitimacy derives from the consent of the governed and the protection
of natural rights [CORRECT]
D. Government must be an absolute sovereign to prevent civil war
Rationale: Locke's social contract theory holds that government legitimacy derives from
popular consent and the protection of natural rights; if government fails this duty,
citizens retain the right to revolution. Hobbes advocated absolute sovereignty, not
Locke.
Correct Answer: C
Q2. Thomas Hobbes argued in Leviathan that life in the state of nature would be
"solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short." What was his proposed solution to this
condition?
A. A limited government with separation of powers
B. A direct democracy governed by the general will
C. An absolute sovereign with irrevocable power surrendered by the people [CORRECT]
D. A constitutional republic with checks and balances
,Rationale: Hobbes believed that only an absolute sovereign could maintain order and
prevent the war of all against all; the social contract was irrevocable, and citizens had
no right to rebel, contrasting sharply with Locke's limited government theory.
Correct Answer: C
Q3. Jean-Jacques Rousseau distinguished between the "general will" and the "will of all."
Which statement best captures this distinction?
A. The general will is the sum of all individual desires, while the will of all represents
majority rule
B. The general will seeks the common good of the whole community, while the will of all
is merely the aggregate of private interests [CORRECT]
C. The general will requires an absolute monarch to determine it
D. The will of all is always identical to the general will
Rationale: Rousseau argued that the general will aims at the common good and
collective autonomy, whereas the will of all merely aggregates individual private
interests; this distinction supports his theory of direct democracy and popular
sovereignty.
Correct Answer: B
Q4. Baron de Montesquieu's classification of governments and emphasis on separation
of powers most directly influenced which American constitutional feature?
A. The establishment of a unitary executive
B. The bicameral structure of Congress
C. The separation of powers and checks and balances system, particularly reflected in
Federalist No. 51 [CORRECT]
D. The direct election of senators
Rationale: Montesquieu's analysis of republics, monarchies, and despotisms, along with
his emphasis on functional separation of powers and intermediate powers, directly
influenced Madison's Federalist No. 51 and the constitutional structure of checks and
balances.
,Correct Answer: C
Q5. The Declaration of Independence lists 27 grievances against King George III and
argues that revolution is justified when government violates the social contract. Which
philosophical concept forms the foundation of Jefferson's argument?
A. Divine right of kings
B. Natural rights and the social contract theory of John Locke [CORRECT]
C. Hobbesian absolutism
D. Rousseau's general will as enforced by a sovereign
Rationale: Jefferson synthesized Locke's natural rights philosophy (life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness) and social contract theory to justify American independence; the
Declaration asserts that governments derive just powers from consent and may be
altered when they fail to secure natural rights.
Correct Answer: B
Q6. The Declaration of Independence states that "all men are created equal" and
endowed with "unalienable Rights." Which philosophical source most directly inspired
this language?
A. Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan
B. John Locke's Second Treatise of Government [CORRECT]
C. Niccolò Machiavelli's The Prince
D. Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto
Rationale: Jefferson's language of natural rights, equality, and government by consent
directly draws from Locke's Second Treatise; Hobbes did not emphasize equality or
unalienable rights, and Machiavelli and Marx are unrelated to the founding era.
Correct Answer: B
Q7. Which Enlightenment philosopher's ideas about the state of nature as a "war of
every man against every man" were most influential on the Articles of Confederation's
emphasis on state sovereignty over strong central government?
A. John Locke
B. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
, C. Thomas Hobbes [CORRECT]
D. Montesquieu
Rationale: While the Articles of Confederation reflected fears of centralized power,
Hobbes's view of human nature as inherently conflictual influenced the founders'
caution about granting too much power to any single authority; however, the Articles'
weakness ultimately led to the stronger Constitution.
Correct Answer: C
Q8. The concept of "property" as a pre-political natural right in Locke's philosophy
includes which broader understanding?
A. Only physical land and material possessions
B. Life, liberty, and estates (the broad foundation of individual rights) [CORRECT]
C. Collective ownership of all resources by the state
D. Property rights granted exclusively by monarchical decree
Rationale: Locke understood property broadly to include life, liberty, and estates; this
expansive view of property as a natural right pre-existing government profoundly
influenced the Declaration of Independence and American constitutional thought.
Correct Answer: B
Q9. Rousseau's statement that "man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains"
reflects which political ideal?
A. Absolute monarchy as the natural order
B. Direct democracy and collective autonomy as the path to genuine freedom
[CORRECT]
C. Constitutional monarchy with parliamentary limits
D. Anarchism and the abolition of all government
Rationale: Rousseau argued that legitimate freedom is achieved through participation in
self-governance under the general will; his ideal was direct democracy where citizens
collectively determine laws, not anarchism or monarchy.