ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Event Videos 18 videos

Roanoke
1090 Views

We're hoping what happened to Roanoke doesn't happen to this video.

Valladolid Debates
31808 Views

Time for some heavy stuff. The Valladolid debates took place in the 16th century, right around the time Spanish were coming over to the New World,...

The Forgotten War
7983 Views

Let us tell you about the Korean War. It was this war where...well, what happened was...huh. Isn't that the craziest thing.

See All

Common Sense 17568 Views


Share It!


Description:

Ever notice how common sense is usually not...common? Sometimes you just need somebody to come along, write a world-changing pamphlet, and knock some common sense into you.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:07

Common Sense: Oh, if only it were... common.

00:12

Every once in a while, a piece of literature does more than just inform or entertain...

00:16

...it changes the world.

00:19

Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species made people look at evolution in a different light.

00:25

Mein Kampf certainly shook things up during Hitler's reign.

00:31

And Everyone Poops changed the way toddlers look at defecation.

00:37

Well, back in colonial America, it was Thomas Paine's

00:40

Common Sense that turned everything on its head.

00:43

So who was this Paine?

00:45

Well, he was actually English born...

00:47

...a son of a Quaker.

00:50

Paine immigrated to America with the help of Benjamin Franklin,

00:53

who was impressed by the man's ideas.

00:57

Once he had set up shop overseas, Paine became a journalist and propagandist.

01:00

Although he probably didn't put all of that on his business card.

01:04

So Paine decided to write a pamphlet

01:06

that would communicate his personal desire for American independence.

01:11

As you might guess, the British weren't exactly banging down his door to grant him

01:14

an ambassadorship. His pamphlet, Common Sense called for independence

01:20

for the American colonists from the British Monarchy.

01:23

It defined "Society" and "Government." Sure, someone could have picked up a dictionary...

01:28

...but Paine had some different ideas about what they should mean.

01:32

And spoke of the pursuit of life, liberty and property.

01:35

Okay, so "property" would later get changed to "the pursuit of happiness," but hey

01:39

-- printing companies charged by the word back then.

01:43

Paine argued in his pamphlet that a Republican Democracy is the only suitable government.

01:47

He laid into the British, insisting that they entrust far too much authority to their monarchs.

01:54

And pointed out the unnatural distinction between a king and a subject...

01:57

...because all men are created equal.

02:03

The pamphlet closed with a call to action...

02:06

...urging the colonists to declare their independence from British rule.

02:09

In other words, ideas were one thing...

02:11

...but if they really wanted to be large and in charge, the American people were going

02:15

to have to stick their necks out a little.

02:19

Paine was successful in getting his point across

02:21

because of his use of a number of rhetorical techniques.

02:24

To recap:

02:25

Gave new meaning to certain terms and phrases we still use today.

02:29

Overturned a common assumption -- that the distinction between "king" and "subject"

02:33

is an unnatural one,

02:35

And ended with a call to action. Pretty clever guy, huh?

02:40

Anyway, Common Sense went over pretty well.

02:43

In fact, it did exactly what Paine hoped it would do...

02:46

...and was largely responsible for the Revolutionary War.

02:50

This guy could have persuaded Cousin It to get a haircut.

02:55

Once the war was over, Paine returned to England and tried to incite revolution in his native country.

03:00

...this time with a book called Rights of Man.

03:03

Jeez, what a rabble-rouser.

03:04

Remind us not to invite him to any of our dinner parties.

03:09

He was eventually kicked out of England for his radical ideas...

03:12

...and later moved to France, where he wrote Age of Reason... while in prison.

03:18

We have a feeling this guy's middle name might have actually been trouble.

03:23

After trying to incite reform in England and France,

03:26

Paine would finally die a penniless drunk in Manhattan.

03:29

A sad finale for someone who contributed so much to American freedom...

03:33

...but at least Captain Trouble stayed true to himself to the end.

Related Videos

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
39794 Views

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government

John Hawkins
255 Views

John Hawkins was may have been the most interesting man in the world. He doesn’t always hijack ships, but when he does... he prefers for them to...

Betty Friedan
650 Views

Betty Frieden was one of the leading influences (arguably the starting one) in women's rights. She argued for gender equality everywhere— from th...

Benjamin Franklin
21628 Views

What do the light bulb, the post office, the lightning rod, the Constitution, and the modern fire department have in common? They were all invented...

The Dred Scott Case
20640 Views

Who was Dred Scott? He was the former slave who took his case for freedom to the Supreme Court but sadly lost the case. (Although here's a bittersw...