
American, French Revolutions Took Different Paths in 18th Century
History often treats the American and French Revolutions as twin siblings of the Enlightenment—born from the same philosophical womb, nurtured by the same ideals of liberty and human rights, and destined to reshape the modern world. This narrative is seductive but fundamentally misleading. While both revolutions emerged from 18th-century Enlightenment thought and sought to overthrow tyrannical rule, they were not variations on the same theme. They were entirely different species of political transformation. The American Revolution was a conservative war for political independence fought against a distant power, designed to preserve existing liberties. The French Revolution was a radical, totalizing restructuring of society from within, designed to obliterate the past and forge a new human order. Understanding why these revolutions diverged so dramatically—and why one produced a stable republic while the other descended into terror and dictatorship—reveals essential truths about the nature of revolutionary change itself. The Core Motive: Political Separation vs. Social Re-engineering The first and most fundamental difference lies in what each revolution sought to accomplish. The American Revolution was primarily a war of political secession. The colonists did not seek to demolish British society, rewrite its laws, or reimagine its social hierarchy. They believed they were British
American, French Revolutions Took Different Paths in 18th Century
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