Final answer:
The level of protection for individual rights envisioned in the Constitution at the conclusion of the Constitutional Convention was minimal, but Anti-Federalist demands led to the inclusion of a Bill of Rights.
Step-by-step explanation:
The level of protection for individual rights that was envisioned in the Constitution at the conclusion of the Constitutional Convention was minimal. The framers of the Constitution did not include a Bill of Rights in the original document and believed that the main body of the Constitution adequately covered rights issues. The idea of including a Bill of Rights was proposed but dismissed during the final week of the Convention. It was only after the states debated ratification and Anti-Federalists demanded some protection for the people against the excesses of government that the Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution. This demonstrated a shift in the framers' original stance on individual rights.