The starting point in human studies begins with societies, and the economic, political and cultural conditions of societies, and the values, traditions, customs and customs they carry, constitute prominent features of those societies, and since life is in constant change, these societies interact with the changes through influence and influence, and according to the circumstances that pass through them. And according to a specific historical stage, and in the midst of those interactions, a thought is born that aims to advance society, in a way that makes those conditions focus on the benefit of society, and among those societies were the American societies, which were suffering from bad conditions of their own at the cultural, economic, and political level, so they were The idea of equality and freedom derived from natural law and the doctrine of utility, leading to the development of this thought in those American societies, which, thanks to it, were transformed into strong political entities after spreading values in political freedom and human rights, and the formation of the American state, as evidenced by the writing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776, which reads: “The creation of people.” They are equal, enjoying eternal and inalienable rights, and governments were established to safeguard these rights for them.
Nibras Hassan (Sat,) studied this question.