This book examines the political works of Andrew Michael Ramsay
(1683-1743) within the context of early eighteenth-century British and
French political thought. In the first monograph on Ramsay in English
for over sixty years, the author uses Ramsay to engage in a broader
evaluation of the political theory in the two countries and the exchange
between them. At the beginning of the eighteenth century, Britain and
France were on divergent political paths. Yet in the first three decades
of that century, the growing impetus of mixed government in Britain
influenced the political theory of its long-standing enemy. Shaped by
experiences and ideologies of the seventeenth century, thinkers in both
states exhibited a desire to produce great change by integrating past
wisdom with modern knowledge.