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A foundational study of government. It maps law and power.Clinton Roosevelt’s The Science Of Government, Founded On Natural Law is a clear, uncompromising natural law treatise that scrutinises the origins of political authority and the principles of governance that constitute the foundations of civil society. Part legal theory reference and part government theory book, Roosevelt balances philosophical argument with attention to institutional effects, tracing how claims about rights and consent translate into offices, laws and civic duties. Rooted in eighteenth-century political thought and Enlightenment-era politics, his line of reasoning shows John Locke influence while grappling directly with social contract theory; the prose is direct, the argument forensic. Read on its own terms, the work reads like a political philosophy classic, concise where others are diffuse, moral where others are merely tactical. Its insistence on legitimacy, accountability and the conditions that sustain civil order has continuing relevance to contemporary debates about authority and public purpose. Scholars will find a precise legal theory reference; political science students will find a compact repository of arguments and historical context. At the same time, curious general readers will appreciate the lucid style and the way abstract ideas are tied to real questions about governing.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Accessible enough for curious readers; rigorous enough for classic-literature collectors. More than an artefact, this edition invites renewed conversation about authority, law and civic purpose, placing Roosevelt back on the shelf of works that continue to shape how we think about government and the moral grounds of political life. Set at the crossroads of political theory and legal history, it invites seminar discussion and close reading, helping students and public intellectuals trace a line from Enlightenment-era claims to the institutions of modern government.