Baron Montesquieu is a French philosopher who lived in the late 1600s and early 1700s. This was before the French Revolution. He trusted Masrock to be another French philosopher. Montesquieu also wrote many books that have had a great impact on society at the time. Montesquieu is considered fair, but he believes in slavery. His other thought is that women are not equal to men, but they can still manage the government. He thinks that women are too weak to control.
Barron de Montesquieu (1689-1755), born in Charles Rouilly de Second, became a wealthy family and inherited the title of his uncle Baron de Montesquieu. Like many other reformists, he did not prevent his privileged position from becoming a spokesperson for democracy. His first book, Persia laughed at the French government and social class. In his "legal spirit" published in 1748, he proposed the concept of separation of power - the foundation of contemporary American democracy. Mother Theresa (baptized in 1910 and died in 1997) is the founder of the Romanian charity missionary group, the Roman Catholic group dedicated to helping poor people, especially Indians. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 and received an award in work at the Indian government. She was blessed by the Roman Catholic Church in 2003, or was known as a lucky church.
Charles Louis de Second Montesquieu (1689-1755), often called Montesquieu, is a social critic of France, a political thinker of the Enlightenment. He is known for his theory of segregation of power. It is thought of as a matter of course in contemporary government debate and is implemented in many constitutions around the world. Montesquieu saw two kinds of government power, sovereignty and administrative authority. Administrative authority is administrative, legislative and justice. They should be separated and interdependent so that the influence of one force does not alone or in combination over the effects of the other two forces.