The 4 Foundations of Freedom
| Philosophy | Core Values |
The Four Foundations of Freedom are, in order of importance according to most of the Founders:
- Private Virtue

- Public Virtue
- Widespread Education
- Auxiliary Precautions
The Founders consistently taught that, in the absence of these foundations, no society can survive, or at least maintain its freedom.
Private virtue means being a person of integrity; being honest in your dealings with others, being faithful in your duties to your family, controlling your appetites, etc.
Public virtue means to voluntarily sacrifice personal benefit for the good of society. For example, George Washington served two terms as President even when, as he was accepting the post, he wrote that it “would be the greatest sacrifice of my personal feelings and wishes that ever I have been called upon to make.”
Contrary to our modern conception of education, widespread education to the Founders didn’t mean job training; it meant classical, liberal education designed to teach individuals how to think, not what to think (see A Thomas Jefferson Education by Oliver DeMille).
And finally, auxiliary precautions are a society’s forms of government that ideally protect life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness. Auxiliary precautions include Legitimate Foundation, Legitimate Authority, Legitimate Role, Separation of Powers, Checks, Balances, Federalism, Written Constitution, Enumerated Limited Powers, Periodic Elections, Electoral College, and Factionalization.
Under each of these four categories are various sub-categories that provide the basis for all content found on The Cause of Liberty.
| Private Virtue | Public Virtue | Widespread Education | Auxiliary Precautions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Family | Prosperity | Liber | Government |
| Religion | Entrepreneurship | Philosophy | Constitutionality |
| Spirituality | Philanthropy | History | Political Philosophy |
| Economics | Government Service | Literature | |
| Georgics | Community Service | ||
| Culture | Providence | ||
| Politics | |||
| Culture |
As our knowledge of all of these subjects increases, so does our dedication to the principles and ideals. And, as this occurs, we are more prepared and able to protect our political and economic freedoms, achieve personal liberty, and fulfill each of our God-given individual missions.