One example is the abandonment of the salutary neglect. Before the war, the colonies didn't have to mind about British laws much when it came to trade and taxing. After the war there was a huge war debt that had to be paid and this strained the relations because the British started enforcing their laws which were previously ignored.
Another was that the colonies were sick of participating in British wars. The colonies had many deals with the French and had no quarrels with them. After the war, the relations between Colonies and France were strained because the colonies had to participate in the war and they didn't want to fight wars because of Britain anymore.
False, the Constitution helped rebuild our new country and the first 13 colonies. It gave the government more power which helped unify the country. The Constitution came after the Articles of Confederation, which, yes, contributed to the failure of the union. The states had too much power because, as a new country, we didn't want a strong central government because they were afraid of a monarchy, like the one in England from which they separated. The Constitution was the document that essentially showed the world we were a true, powerful country. It gave us the first presidency, the separate government branches, and to give the states more power so they wouldn't try to secede from the union, the Bill of Rights was created.
Answer:French philosophy, here taken to mean philosophy in the French language, has been extremely diverse and has influenced Western philosophy as a whole for centuries, from the medieval scholasticism of Peter Abelard, through the founding of modern philosophy by René Descartes
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