Politics o Amazon Политика Politiikka PoliticsWhat a mountain of knowledge! Just to my taste and upbuilding. To the extent that I lost my right of copying more text. So I grabbed another means, screenshots. Now I have a system of screenshots. But, in the end, they are not very practical as notes. Better scroll the book on and on. A good model for the structure of any ebook form textbook. I am just constructting one. Have read Philosophy as my first DK revolutionary easy readers. Am intending to read the whole lot of them as a well-earned dessert as an 83 year oldboy economics professor. Have already ordered Religion and a couple of others. Warmly recommend to anybody. Kindle introduction word to word confirmed. Five stars generously earned. ПолитикаКакая гора знаний! Просто в моем вкусе и настроении. До такой степени, что я потерял право копировать больше текста. Так что я схватил другое средство, скриншоты. Теперь у меня есть система скриншотов. Но, в конце концов, они не очень практичны в качестве нот. Лучше пролистайте книгу и продолжайте. Хорошая модель для структуры любой электронной книги в виде учебника. Я только что конструирую. Я прочитал «Философию» как своего первого революционного легкого читателя DK. Я собираюсь рассматривать всех их как заслуженную десерт, как 83-летний заслуженный профессор экономики. Уже заказал Религию и еще парочку. Всем настоятельно рекомендую. Разжечь введение Киндле слово в слово подтверждено. Щедро заработано пять звезд. PolitiikkaMikä vuori tietoa! Juuri minun makuuni ja ylösrakennuksekseni. Siinä määrin, että menetin oikeuden kopioida enemmän tekstiä. Joten tartuin toiseen keinoon, kuvakaappauksiin. Nyt minulla on selaussivuna kuvakaappausten järjestelmä. Mutta loppujen lopuksi ne eivät ole kovin käytännöllisiä muistiinpanoina. Selaa mieluummin aina vain itse kirjaa. Hyvä malli minkä tahansa e-kirjamuotoisen oppikirjan rakenteelle. Rakennan juuri yhtä. Olen lukenut Filosofian ensimmäisenä DK:n vallankumouksellisena helposti luettavana. Aion lukea ne kaikki hyvin ansaittuna jälkiruokana 83-vuotiaana eläkeukkona ja taloustieteen professorina. Olen jo tilannut Uskonnon ja pari muuta. Suosittelen lämpimästi kenelle hyvänsä. Kindle-esittely sanasta sanaan vahvistettu. Hyvin ansaitut viisi tähteä tälle tietovarastolle.
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Huomautukset Remarks ЗамечанияPoliticsThis easy-to-understand guide to politics and government introduces more than 80 of the most important theories and big ideas of leaders and politicians throughout history.The Politics Book makes government and politics easy to understand by explaining the big ideas simply, using clear language supported by eye-catching graphics. The key events in political history are outlined from the origins of political thinking by Confucius and Aristotle to modern-day activists such as Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela. Helpful mind maps break down their important concepts into bitesize chunks to make the subject accessible to students of politics and anyone with an interest in how government works. A handy reference section also provides a glossary of key terms and a directory of significant political figures.
Filled with thought-provoking quotes from great political thinkers such as Nietzsche, Malcolm X, Karl Marx, and Mao Zedong, The Politics Book gives context to the world of government and power. Pagetop |
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1 | 0001 | CONTENTS |
14 | 0002 | INTRODUCTION |
17 | 000201 | Political realism |
19 | 0003 | Rise of ideology |
22 | 000301 | A disputed future |
24 | 01 | ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGHT 800 BCE–30 CE |
3 | 010002 | If your desire is for good, the people will be good |
5 | 010003 | Confucius The art of war is of vital importance to the state |
5 | 010004 | Sun Tzu Plans for the country are only to be shared with the learned |
5 | 010005 | cities will never have rest from their evils |
5 | 010006 | Plato Man is by nature a political animal |
5 | 010007 | Aristotle A single wheel does not move |
5 | 010008 | Chanakya If evil ministers enjoy safety and profit, this is the beginning of downfall |
5 | 010009 | Han Fei Tzu The government is bandied about like a ball |
5 | 010010 | Cicero |
27 | 010011 | IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Confucianism |
27 | 010012 | FOCUS Paternalist |
29 | 010013 | The superior man |
31 | 010014 | Justifying hereditary rule |
34 | 010015 | The importance of ritual |
36 | 010016 | Crime and punishment |
39 | 010017 | The state philosophy |
41 | 010018 | Mozi,3,Han Fei Tzu,3,Sun Yat-Sen,3,Mao Zedong |
43 | 010019 | Military strategy |
46 | 010020 | Knowing when to fight |
47 | 010021 | Military intelligence |
52 | 010022 | A unifying code |
57 | 010023 | The good life |
59 | 010024 | Ideal Forms |
61 | 010025 | Educating kings |
66 | 010026 | Naturally social |
67 | 010027 | The good life |
69 | 010028 | Species of rule |
75 | 010029 | Advising the sovereign |
78 | 010030 | The end justifies the means |
79 | 010031 | Intelligence and espionage |
84 | 010032 | Sun Tzu |
84 | 010033 | Mozi |
84 | 010034 | Thomas Hobbes |
84 | 010035 | Mao Zedong |
86 | 010036 | Checks and balances |
87 | 010037 | Aristotle |
87 | 010038 | Montesquieu |
87 | 010039 | Benjamin Franklin |
87 | 010040 | Thomas Jefferson |
87 | 010041 | James Madison |
87 | 0101 | 12,MEDIEVAL POLITICS 30 CE–1515 CE If justice be taken away, what are governments but great bands of robbers?,3,Augustine of Hippo Fighting has been enjoined upon you while it is hateful to you |
87 | 010101 | Muhammad The people refuse the rule of virtuous men |
87 | 010102 | Al-Farabi No free man shall be imprisoned, except by the law of the land |
87 | 010103 | Barons of King John For war to be just, there is required a just cause |
87 | 010104 | Thomas Aquinas To live politically means living in accordance with good laws |
87 | 010105 | Giles of Rome The Church should devote itself to imitating Christ and give up its secular power |
87 | 010106 | Marsilius of Padua Government prevents injustice, other than such as it commits itself |
87 | 010107 | Ibn Khaldun A prudent ruler cannot, and must not, honour his word |
87 | 010108 | Niccolò Machiavelli |
87 | 010109 | INTRODUCTION |
88 | 010110 | The impact of Christianity |
89 | 010111 | Islamic influence |
90 | 010112 | Difficult questions |
97 | 010113 | Peaceful but not pacifist |
101 | 010114 | Divine wisdom |
106 | 010115 | Freedom from tyranny |
107 | 010116 | Towards a parliament |
111 | 010117 | A reasoned method |
111 | 010118 | Justice, the prime virtue |
113 | 010119 | Defining a just war |
114 | 010120 | Natural and human laws |
116 | 010121 | The urge for community |
117 | 010122 | Ruling justly |
119 | 010123 | Maintaining order |
120 | 010124 | A radical thinker |
1254 | 010125 | Cicero,3,Augustine of Hippo,3,Muhammad,3,Marsilius of Padua,3,Francisco Suárez,3,Michael Walzer |
129 | 010126 | Built on community |
130 | 010127 | Corruption leads to decline |
1377 | 010128 | Muhammad,3,Al-Farabi,3,Niccolò Machiavelli,3,Karl Marx |
134 | 010129 | A realistic approach |
136 | 010130 | Using human nature |
137 | 010131 | Advice for new rulers |
138 | 010132 | Leadership qualities |
140 | 010133 | Conspiracy is useful |
141 | 010134 | The end is what counts |
142 | 010135 | An ideal republic |
144 | 010136 | Enduring legacy |
145 | 010137 | “Machiavellian” behaviour |
147 | 010138 | Han Fei Tzu |
147 | 010139 | Ibn Khaldun |
147 | 010140 | Thomas Hobbes |
147 | 010141 | Carl von Clausewitz |
147 | 010142 | Antonio Gramsci |
148 | 02 | 13 RATIONALITY AND ENLIGHTENMENT 1515–1770 In the beginning, everything was common to all |
148 | 020043 | Francisco de Vitoria Sovereignty is the absolute and perpetual power of a commonwealth |
148 | 020044 | Jean Bodin The natural law is the foundation of human law |
148 | 020045 | Francisco Suárez Politics is the art of associating men |
148 | 020046 | Johannes Althusius Liberty is the power that we have over ourselves |
148 | 020047 | Hugo Grotius The condition of man is a condition of war |
148 | 020048 | Thomas Hobbes The end of law is to preserve and enlarge freedom |
148 | 020049 | John Locke When legislative and executive powers are united in the same body, there can be no liberty |
148 | 020050 | Montesquieu Independent entrepreneurs make good citizens |
148 | 020051 | Benjamin Franklin |
148 | 0201 | INTRODUCTION |
149 | 020101 | Absolute sovereignty |
150 | 020102 | Towards Enlightenment |
151 | 020103 | Individual rights |
153 | 020104 | Illegitimate conquests |
154 | 020105 | Can war be just? |
155 | 020106 | Francisco Suárez |
155 | 020107 | Hugo Grotius |
159 | 020108 | The divine right of kings |
160 | 020109 | Thomas Aquinas |
160 | 020110 | Niccolò Machiavelli |
160 | 020111 | Thomas Hobbes |
160 | 020112 | John Locke |
160 | 020113 | Carl Schmitt |
163 | 020114 | Breaking human laws |
164 | 020115 | A divine right? |
164 | 020116 | International law |
165 | 020117 | Francisco de Vitoria |
165 | 020118 | Hugo Grotius |
165 | 020119 | John Locke |
1665 | 020120 | IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Federalism FOCUS Consociation BEFORE c.350 BCE Aristotle argues that humans are naturally sociable beings. |
1576 | 020121 | centralizing power and authority in the monarch. AFTER 1762 Jean-Jacques Rousseau claims that the central idea of the social contract must be that sovereignty belongs to the people. |
1576 | 020122 | 1787 The last four articles of the Constitution of the United States of America express the principles of its federalist system of government. 1789 The French Revolution overthrows the king and claims sovereignty for the people. |
168 | 020123 | Bottom-up, not top-down |
169 | 020124 | Jean Bodin |
169 | 020125 | Thomas Hobbes |
169 | 020126 | Jean-Jacques Rousseau |
169 | 020127 | Thomas Jefferson |
169 | 020128 | Michel Foucault |
172 | 020129 | Power over ourselves |
174 | 020130 | Francisco Suárez |
174 | 020131 | John Locke,3,John Stuart Mill |
177 | 020132 | The cruel state of nature |
179 | 020133 | Rule by social contract |
180 | 020134 | A necessary evil |
182 | 020135 | Collective action |
183 | 020136 | Pragmatic politics |
184 | 020137 | Against a state of nature |
188 | 020138 | Jean Bodin,3,John Locke,3,Jean-Jacques Rousseau,3,John Rawls |
191 | 020139 | The centrality of laws |
193 | 020140 | Man’s initial condition |
196 | 020141 | The right to revolt |
197 | 020142 | Locke’s legacy |
198 | 020143 | Montesquieu |
198 | 020144 | Jean-Jacques Rousseau,3,Thomas Jefferson |
198 | 020145 | Robert Nozick |
201 | 020146 | Separation of powers |
202 | 020147 | Jean-Jacques Rousseau |
202 | 020148 | Thomas Jefferson |
202 | 020149 | James Madison |
202 | 020150 | Alexis de Tocqueville |
202 | 020151 | Henry David Thoreau |
202 | 020152 | Noam Chomsky |
205 | 020153 | Entrepreneurial virtue |
207 | 020154 | Promoting the public good |
207 | 020155 | Thomas Paine,3,Thomas Jefferson |
209 | 03 | REVOLUTIONARY THOUGHTS |
209 | 0301 | INTRODUCTION |
209 | 030101 | Sovereignty of the people |
211 | 030102 | New conservatism |
213 | 030103 | Rethinking the status quo |
215 | 030104 | Society shaped by politics |
216 | 030105 | On property and inequality |
218 | 030106 | The loss of liberty |
219 | 030107 | Revising the social contract |
220 | 030108 | Popular sovereignty |
221 | 030109 | A new contract |
223 | 030110 | Private versus general will |
224 | 030111 | A revolutionary icon |
1754 | 030112 | Niccolò Machiavelli |
1754 | 030113 | Hugo Grotius |
1754 | 030114 | Thomas Hobbes |
1754 | 030115 | Edmund Burke |
1754 | 030116 | Hannah Arendt |
209 | 0302 | 14 REVOLUTIONARY THOUGHTS 1770–1848 To renounce liberty is to renounce being a man |
209 | 030201 | Jean-Jacques Rousseau No generally valid principle of legislation can be based on happiness |
209 | 030202 | Immanuel Kant The passions of individuals should be subjected |
209 | 030203 | Edmund Burke Rights dependent on property are the most precarious |
209 | 030204 | Thomas Paine All men are created equal |
209 | 030205 | Thomas Jefferson Each nationality contains its centre of happiness within itself |
209 | 030206 | Johann Gottfried Herder Government has but a choice of evils |
209 | 030207 | Jeremy Bentham The people have a right to keep and bear arms |
209 | 030208 | James Madison The most respectable women are the most oppressed |
209 | 030209 | Mary Wollstonecraft The slave feels self-existence to be something external |
209 | 030210 | Georg Hegel War is the continuation of Politik by other means |
209 | 030211 | Carl von Clausewitz |
242 | 030212 | John C. Calhoun A state too extensive in itself ultimately falls into decay |
242 | 030213 | Simón Bolívar An educated and wise government recognizes the developmental needs of its society |
242 | 030214 | José María Luis Mora The tendency to attack “the family” is a symptom of social chaos |
242 | 030215 | Auguste Comte |
311 | 04 | THE RISE OF THE MASSES 1848–1910 Socialism is a new system of serfdom |
311 | 040016 | Alexis de Tocqueville Say not I, but we |
311 | 040017 | Giuseppe Mazzini That so few dare to be eccentric marks the chief danger of the time |
311 | 040018 | John Stuart Mill No man is good enough to govern another man, without that other’s consent |
311 | 040019 | Abraham Lincoln Property is theft |
311 | 040020 | Pierre-Joseph Proudhon The privileged man is a man depraved in intellect and heart |
311 | 040021 | Mikhail Bakunin That government is best which governs not at all |
311 | 040022 | Henry David Thoreau Communism is the riddle of history solved |
311 | 040023 | Karl Marx The men who proclaimed the republic became the assassins of freedom |
311 | 040024 | Alexander Herzen We must look for a central axis for our nation |
311 | 040025 | Ito Hirobumi The will to power |
311 | 040026 | Friedrich Nietzsche It is the myth that is alone important |
311 | 040027 | Georges Sorel We have to take working men as they are |
311 | 040028 | Eduard Bernstein The disdain of our formidable neighbour is the greatest danger for Latin America |
311 | 040029 | José Martí It is necessary to dare in order to succeed |
311 | 040030 | Peter Kropotkin Either women are to be killed, or women are to have the vote |
311 | 040031 | Emmeline Pankhurst It is ridiculous to deny the existence of a Jewish nation |
311 | 040032 | Theodor Herzl Nothing will avail to save a nation whose workers have decayed |
311 | 040033 | Beatrice Webb Protective legislation in America is shamefully inadequate |
311 | 040034 | Jane Addams Land to the tillers! |
311 | 040035 | Sun Yat-Sen The individual is a single cog in an ever-moving mechanism |
311 | 040036 | Max Weber |
415 | 05 | 16 THE CLASH OF IDEOLOGIES 1910–1945 Non-violence is the first article of my faith |
415 | 050037 | Mahatma Gandhi Politics begin where the masses are |
415 | 050038 | Vladimir Lenin The mass strike results from social conditions with historical inevitability |
415 | 050039 | Rosa Luxemburg An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile hoping it will eat him last |
415 | 050040 | Winston Churchill The Fascist conception of the state is all-embracing |
415 | 050041 | Giovanni Gentile The wealthy farmers must be deprived of the sources of their existence |
415 | 050042 | Joseph Stalin If the end justifies the means, what justifies the end? |
415 | 050043 | Leon Trotsky We will unite Mexicans by giving guarantees to the peasant and the businessman |
415 | 050044 | Emiliano Zapata War is a racket |
415 | 050045 | Smedley D. Butler Sovereignty is not given, it is taken |
415 | 050046 | Mustafa Kemal Atatürk Europe has been left without a moral code |
415 | 050047 | José Ortega y Gasset We are 400 million people asking for liberty |
415 | 050048 | Marcus Garvey India cannot really be free unless separated from the British empire |
415 | 050049 | Manabendra Nath Roy Sovereign is he who decides on the exception |
415 | 050050 | Carl Schmitt Communism is as bad as imperialism |
415 | 050051 | Jomo Kenyatta The state must be conceived of as an “educator” |
415 | 050052 | Antonio Gramsci Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun |
415 | 050053 | Mao Zedong |
516 | 06 | 17 POST-WAR POLITICS 1945–PRESENT The chief evil is unlimited government |
516 | 060054 | Friedrich Hayek Parliamentary government and rationalist politics do not belong to the same system |
516 | 060055 | Michael Oakeshott The objective of the Islamic jihad is to eliminate the rule of an un-Islamic system |
516 | 060056 | Abul Ala Maududi There is nothing to take a man’s freedom away from him, save other men |
516 | 060057 | Ayn Rand Every known and established fact can be denied |
516 | 060058 | Hannah Arendt What is a woman? |
516 | 060059 | Simone de Beauvoir No natural object is solely a resource |
516 | 060060 | Arne Naess We are not anti-white, we are against white supremacy,3,Nelson Mandela Only the weak-minded believe that politics is a place of collaboration |
516 | 060061 | Gianfranco Miglio During the initial stage of the struggle, the oppressed tend to become oppressors |
516 | 060062 | Paulo Freire Justice is the first virtue of social institutions |
516 | 060063 | John Rawls Colonialism is violence in its natural state |
516 | 060064 | Frantz Fanon The ballot or the bullet |
516 | 060065 | Malcolm X We need to “cut off the king’s head” |
516 | 060066 | Michel Foucault Liberators do not exist. The people liberate themselves |
516 | 060067 | Che Guevara Everybody has to make sure that the rich folk are happy |
516 | 060068 | Noam Chomsky Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance |
516 | 060069 | Martin Luther King Perestroika unites socialism with democracy |
516 | 060070 | Mikhail Gorbachev The intellectuals erroneously fought Islam |
516 | 060071 | Ali Shariati The hellishness of war drives us to break with every restraint |
516 | 060072 | Michael Walzer No state more extensive than the minimal state can be justified |
516 | 060073 | Robert Nozick No Islamic law says violate women’s rights |
516 | 060074 | Shirin Ebadi Suicide terrorism is mainly a response to foreign occupation |
516 | 060075 | Robert Pape |
645 | 0601 | 18 DIRECTORY |
677 | 0602 | GLOSSARY |
691 | 0603 | CONTRIBUTORS |
694 | 0604 | ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
694 | 0605 | COPYRIGHT |
696 | 0606 | END |
696 | 0607 | ###enrufi |
1 (17) At its most radical, moralism produces descriptions of ideal political societies known as Utopias, named after English statesman and philosopher Thomas More’s book Utopia, published in 1516, 2 (29) Confucius’s moral standpoint was firmly rooted in Chinese convention, and had at its heart the traditional virtues of loyalty, duty, and respect. 3 (30) In Confucius’s view, human nature is not perfect, but it is capable of being changed by the example of sincere virtue. Similarly, society can be transformed by the example of fair and benevolent government. 4 (30) The notion of reciprocity – the idea that just and generous treatment will be met with a just and generous response – underpins Confucius’s moral philosophy, and it is also a cornerstone of his political thinking. 5 (33) Confucius said: “The administration of government lies in getting proper men. Such men are to be got by means of the ruler’s own character. That character is to be cultivated by his treading in the ways of duty. And the treading of those ways of duty is to be cultivated by the cherishing of benevolence.” 6 (34) The ceremonies and rituals allowed people to manifest their devotion to those above them in the hierarchy and their consideration towards those below them. 7 (36) As with his social structure, he proposed a system based on reciprocity: if you are treated with respect, you will act with respect. His version of the Golden Rule (“do as you would be done by”) was in the negative: “what you do not desire for 8 (40) Confucianism has not entirely disappeared under China’s communist regime, and it had a subtle influence on the structure of society right up to the Cultural Revolution. 9 (42) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Realism FOCUS Diplomacy and war BEFORE 8th century BCE A “golden age” of Chinese philosophy begins, which produces the so-called Hundred Schools of Thought. 6th century BCE Confucius proposes a framework for civil society based on traditional values. 10 (42) five years after his death. 1937 Mao Zedong writes On Guerrilla Warfare. 11 (50) CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Mohism FOCUS Meritocracy BEFORE 6th century BCE Chinese philosopher Laozi advocates Daoism – acting in accordance with the Way (dao). 5th century BCE Confucius proposes a government system based on traditional values enacted by a class of scholars. 12 (52) "Exaltation of the virtuous is the root of government." Mozi 13 (55) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Rationalism FOCUS Philosopher kings BEFORE 594 BCE The Athenian lawmaker Solon lays down laws that act as the foundation for Greek democracy. c.450 BCE Greek philosopher Protagoras says that political justice is an imposition of human ideas, not a reflection of natural justice. 14 (55) advocating a more democratic form of government than suggested by Plato’s Republic. 15 (56) All the citizens could speak and vote at the assembly – they did not elect representatives to do this on their behalf. It should be noted, however, that the “citizens” were a minority of the population; they were free men aged over 30 whose parents were Athenians. Women, slaves, children, younger men, and foreigners or first-generation settlers, were excluded from the democratic process. 16 (57) Plato went on to become as influential a philosopher as Socrates, and towards the end of his career he turned his considerable intellect to the business of politics, most famously in the Republic. Unsurprisingly, given that he had seen Socrates condemned and was himself from a noble family, Plato had little sympathy for democracy. But neither did he find much to commend in any other existing form of government, all of which he believed led the state into “evils”. 17 (57) To understand what Plato meant by “evils” in this context, it is important to bear in mind the concept of eudaimonia, the “good life”, which for ancient Greeks was a vital aim. “Living well” was not a question of achieving material wellbeing, honour, or mere pleasure, but rather living according to fundamental virtues such as wisdom, piety, and above all, justice. The purpose of the state, Plato believed, was to promote these virtues so that its citizens could lead this good life. Issues such as protection of property, liberty, and stability were only important in so far as they created conditions that allowed citizens to live well. In his opinion, however, no political 18 (59) "The chief penalty is to be governed by someone worse if a man will not himself hold office and rule." Plato 19 (60) These ideal Forms, or Ideas, as Plato called them, exist in a realm outside the world we live in, accessible only via philosophical reasoning and enquiry. It is this that makes philosophers uniquely qualified to define what constitutes the good life, and of leading a truly virtuous life, rather than simply imitating individual examples of virtue. 20 (61) Socrates chose to drink poison rather than renounce his views. The trial and conviction of Socrates caused Plato to doubt the virtues of the democratic political system of Athens. 21 (61) In medieval times, Plato’s influence spread to the Islamic empire, and to Christian Europe, where Augustine incorporated them into the teachings of the Church. Later, Plato’s ideas were overshadowed by those of Aristotle, whose advocacy of democracy chimed better with the political philosophers of the Renaissance. "Democracy… is full of variety and disorder, dispensing a sort of equality to equals and unequals alike." Plato 22 (63) Plato used the metaphor of the ship of state to explain why philosophers should be kings. Though he does not seek power, the navigator is the only one who can steer a proper course – much as the philosopher is the only one with the knowledge to rule justly. 23 (65) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Democracy FOCUS Political virtue BEFORE 431 BCE Athenian statesman Pericles states that democracy provides equal justice for all. c.380–360 BCE In the Republic, Plato advocates rule by “philosopher kings” who possess wisdom. 24 (65) AFTER 13th century Thomas Aquinas incorporates Aristotle’s ideas into Christian doctrine. c.1300 Giles of Rome stresses the importance of the rule of law to living in a civil society. 1651 Thomas Hobbes proposes a social contract to prevent man from living in a “brutish” state of nature. 25 (68) "Law is order, and good law is good order." Aristotle 26 (70) "The basis of a democratic state is liberty." Aristotle 27 (71) Aristotle’s ideas had a growing influence on European political thought throughout the Middle Ages. Despite being criticised for his often authoritarian standpoint (and his defence of slavery and concludes, polity provides the best opportunity to lead a good life. Although Aristotle categorizes democracy as a “defective” form of regime, he argues that it is only second best to polity, and better than the “good” aristocracy or monarchy. 28 (73) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Realism FOCUS Utilitarian BEFORE 6th century BCE The Chinese general Sun Tzu writes his treatise The Art of War, bringing an analytical approach to statecraft. 424 BCE Mahapadma Nanda establishes the Nanda dynasty, and relies on his generals for tactical advice. 29 (75) The lion capital of Ashoka stood on top of a pillar in Sarnath at the centre of the Mauryan empire. Chanakya helped to found this powerful empire, which came to rule almost the whole of India. 30 (77) "All things begin with counsel." Chanakya 31 (78) "Through ministerial eyes others’ weaknesses are seen." Chanakya 32 (80) Arthashastra comparison with Machiavelli’s The Prince, written around 2,000 years later. However, the central doctrine, of rule by a sovereign and ministers, has more in common with Confucius and Mozi, or Plato and Aristotle, whose ideas Chanakya may have come across as a student in Takshashila. 33 (80) Elephants played a big role in Indian warfare, often terrifying enemies so much that they would withdraw rather than fight. Chanakya developed new strategies for warfare with elephants. 34 (82) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Legalism FOCUS State laws BEFORE 5th century BCE Confucius advocates a hierarchy based on traditional family relationships, with the sovereign and his ministers ruling by example. 35 (4) China’s Han dynasty rejects Legalism and adopts Confucianism. 589–618 CE Legalist principles are revived during the Sui dynasty in an attempt to unify the Chinese empire. 36 (84) "To govern the state by law is to praise the right and blame the wrong." Han Fei Tzu 37 (84) See also: Confucius 38 (85) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Republicanism FOCUS Mixed constitution BEFORE c.380 BCE Plato writes the Republic, outlining his ideas for an ideal city-state. 2nd century BCE Greek historian Polybius’s The Histories describes the rise of the Roman Republic and its constitution with a separation of 39 (87) The Roman standard carried the legend SPQR (the Senate and the People of Rome), celebrating the central institutions of the mixed constitution. See also: Plato 40 (88) The pagan Roman empire had simply had little time for philosophy and theory, but in early Christian Europe, political thinking was subordinated to religious dogma, and the ideas of ancient Greece and Rome were largely neglected. 41 (89) Meanwhile, in Europe, scholarship had become the preserve of the clergy, and the structure of society was prescribed by the Church, leaving little room for dissent. It would take Islamic influence to bring fresh ideas to medieval Europe, as scholars rediscovered the classical texts. In the 12th century, the texts that Islamic scholars had preserved and translated began to come to the notice of Christian scholars, particularly in Spain, where the two faiths co-existed. News of the rediscovery spread across the Christian world, and despite the suspicion of the Church authorities, there was a rush to find and translate not only the texts, but also their Islamic commentaries. 42 (90) It was in Florence that Niccolò Machiavelli, a potent symbol of Renaissance thought, shocked the world by producing a political philosophy that was entirely pragmatic in its morality. 43 (91) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Christianity FOCUS Just government BEFORE 4th century BCE In the Republic and Laws, Plato stresses the importance of justice in an ideal state. 1st century BCE Cicero opposes the overthrow of the Roman Republic and its replacement with an emperor. 44 (91) 306 CE Constantine I becomes the first Christian emperor of the Roman empire. AFTER 13th century Thomas Aquinas uses Augustine’s arguments to define a just war. 14th century Ibn Khaldun says that government’s role is to prevent injustice. c.1600 Francisco Suárez and the School of Salamanca create a philosophy of natural law. 45 (92) Augustine believed that, in practice, few men lived according to divine laws, and the vast majority lived in a state of sin. He distinguished between two kingdoms: the civitas Dei (city of God) and the civitas terrea (city of Earth). 46 (92) Augustine further points out that even in a sinful civitas terrea, the authority of the state can ensure order through the rule of law, and that order is something we all have a reason to want. 47 (93) "Without justice an association of men in the bond of law cannot possibly continue." Augustine 48 (93) in which he described the relationship between the Roman empire and God’s law. 49 (95) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Islam FOCUS Just war BEFORE 6th century BCE In The Art of War, Sun Tzu argues that the military is essential to the state. c. 413 Augustine describes a government without justice as no better than a band of robbers. 50 (95) AFTER 13th century Thomas Aquinas defines the conditions for a just war. 1095 Christians launch the First Crusade to wrest control of Jerusalem and the Holy Land from the Muslims. 1932 In Towards Understanding Islam, Abul Ala Maududi insists that Islam embraces all aspects of human life, including politics. 51 (98) This duty is encapsulated in the Islamic idea of jihad (literally “struggle”, or “striving”), which was originally directed against neighbouring cities that attacked Muhammad’s Islamic state. As these were conquered one by one, fighting became a way of spreading the faith and, in political terms, expanding the Islamic empire. 52 (980) "Fight in the name of Allah and in the way of Allah. Fight against those who disbelieve in Allah." Sunni Hadith 53 (98) Muslim pilgrims pray near the Prophet Muhammad Mosque in the holy city of Medina, Saudi Arabia, where Muhammad established the first Islamic state. 54 (99) c.622 Constitution of Medina c.632 The Quran 8th and 9th centuries The Hadith See also: Augustine of Hippo,3,Al-Farabi,3,Thomas Aquinas,3,Ibn Khaldun,3,Abul Ala Maududi,3,Ali Shariati 55 (100) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Islam FOCUS Political virtue BEFORE c.380–360 BCE Plato proposes rule by “philosopher kings” in the Republic. 3rd century CE Philosophers such as Plotinus reinterpret Plato’s works, introducing theological and mystical ideas. 56 (100) 9th century The Arab philosopher Al-Kindi brings Classical Greek texts to the House of Wisdom, Baghdad. AFTER c.980–1037 The Persian writer Avicenna incorporates rational philosophy into Islamic theology. 13th century Thomas Aquinas defines the cardinal and theological virtues, and differentiates between natural, human, and divine law. 57 (101) "The goal of the model state is not only to procure the material prosperity of its citizens, but also their future destiny." Al-Farabi 58 (105) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Parliamentarism FOCUS Liberty BEFORE c.509 BCE The monarchy in Rome is overthrown and replaced by a republic. 1st century BCE Cicero argues for a return to the Roman Republic after Julius Caesar takes power from the Senate. AFTER 1640s The English Civil War and subsequent overthrow of the monarchy establish that a monarch cannot govern without parliamentary consent. 1776 The US Declaration of Independence lists “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness” as inherent rights. 1948 The United Nations General Assembly adopts the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Paris. 59 (106) "To no man will we sell, or deny, or delay, right or justice." Magna Carta, Clause 40 60 (108) The Houses of Parliament in London, England, has its origin in the insistence of the barons in 1215 that the monarch could not levy additional taxes without the consent of his royal council. 61 (109) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Natural law FOCUS Just war BEFORE 44 BCE In De Officiis, Cicero argues against war, except as a last resort in order to defend the state and restore peace. 5th century Augustine of Hippo argues that the state should promote virtue. 620s Muhammad calls on Muslims to fight in defence of Islam. AFTER 1625 Hugo Grotius puts the theory of just war into the context of international law in On the Law of War and Peace. 1945 The United Nations (UN) Charter prohibits the use of force in international conflict unless authorized by the UN. 62 (110) European thinkers began to take an interest in other philosophers – in particular, in Aristotle and his Islamic interpreter, the Andalusian polymath Averroes. 63 (111) "Peace is the work of justice indirectly, in so far as justice removes the obstacles to peace; but it is the work of charity, according to its very notion, that causes peace." Thomas Aquinas 64 (113) "The only excuse, therefore, for going to war is that we may live in peace unharmed." Cicero 65 (113) Warfare for the protection of Christian values could be justified in Aquinas’s thinking, including the First Crusade of 1096–99, in which Jerusalem was captured and thousands massacred. 66 (113) Aquinas identified three distinct basic requirements for just war: rightful intention, authority of the sovereign, and a just cause. 67 (114) The Geneva Convention consists of four treaties signed between 1864 and 1949 – broadly based on the concepts of just war – defining fair treatment of soldiers and civilians in wartime. 68 (115) "Reason in man is rather like God in the world." Thomas Aquinas 69 (116) The laws that we create for ourselves and our societies must be based on natural law, which in itself is a reflection of the eternal law that guides the entire universe. 70 (117) The Kellogg-Briand Pact, signed in 1928 by 15 countries, forbade its signatories from starting wars. This accorded with Aquinas’s principle that war should only be used to restore peace. 71 (118) "A just war is in the long run far better for a man’s soul than the most prosperous peace." Theodore Roosevelt 72 (120) Surprisingly, in view of his notion of the state existing to promote life according to Christian principles, Aquinas does not dismiss the possibility of a legitimate non-Christian ruler. 73 (120) Aquinas’s view of the requirements of a just war – rightful intention, authority, and just cause – still hold true today, and motivate many involved in anti-war movements. 74 (122) The United Nations was established in 1945 after World War II with the intention of maintaining international peace and promoting principles that Aquinas would have called natural law. 75 (123) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Constitutionalism FOCUS The rule of law BEFORE c.350 BCE In his Politics, Aristotle says that Man is a political animal by nature. 76 (125) King Philip IV of France arranged a public burning of the Unam Sanctam. This document attempted to force the king into submission to the papacy – a principle that Giles agreed with. See also: Aristotle,3,Thomas Aquinas,3,Marsilius of Padua,3,Francisco Suárez,3,Thomas Hobbes 77 (126) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Secularism FOCUS Role of the Church BEFORE c.350 BCE Aristotle’s Politics describes the role of the citizen in the administration and jurisdiction of the city-state. 78 (126) "No elective official who derives his authority from election alone requires any further confirmation or approval." Marsilius of Padua 79 (127) Management of human affairs is best conducted by legislation, administered by the people, not imposed by divine law, which even the Bible does not sanction. Christ himself, he points out, denied the clergy any coercive power over people in this world, stressing their role as teachers. The Church should therefore follow the example of Jesus and his disciples and return political power to the state. This secular state can then better manage the specialist areas of government, government, such as law and order, and economic and military matters, under a ruler chosen by a majority of the people. See also: Aristotle,3,Augustine of Hippo,3,Giles of Rome,3,Niccolò Machiavelli 80 (128) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Islam FOCUS Corruption of power BEFORE 1027–256 BCE Historians in China during the Zhou dynasty describe the “Dynastic Cycle” of empires declining and being replaced. c.950 Al-Farabi draws on Plato and Aristotle for The Virtuous City, his notion of an ideal Islamic state and the shortcomings of governments. AFTER 1776 In The Wealth of Nations, British economist Adam Smith explains the principles behind the division of labour. 1974 US economist Arthur Laffer uses Ibn Khaldun’s ideas on taxation to produce the Laffer curve, which demonstrated the relationship between rates of taxation and government revenue. 81 (129) Ibn Khaldun’s assertion that “government prevents injustice, other than such as it commits itself” could be taken for a cynical modern comment on political institutions, or for the realism of Machiavelli. 82 (130) "When a nation has become the victim of a psychological defeat, then that marks the end of a nation." Ibn Khaldun 83 (136) An effective leader can harness the weaker traits of humanity in his people to great effect, in the same way that a sheepdog can manipulate a herd of sheep. 84 (137) "A prince never lacks legitimate reasons to break his promise." Niccolò Machiavelli 85 (138) Sandro Botticelli’s Adoration of the Magi, painted in 1475, includes representations of the powerful Medici family, who ruled Florence at the time Machiavelli wrote The Prince. 86 (139) "In judging policies we should consider the results that have been achieved through them rather than the means by which they have been executed." Niccolò Machiavelli 87 (142) Though Machiavelli did not sanction the use of questionable methods to get things done in private life, he argued that the ruler should use all means necessary to secure the future of the state. 88 (143) "Since love and fear can hardly exist together, if we must choose between them, it is far safer to be feared than loved." Niccolò Machiavelli 89 (144) Italian dictator Benito Mussolini was a forceful and ruthless leader, more feared than loved. He claimed inspiration from The Prince. 90 (145) Machiavelli’s critics, too, came from all sides of the political spectrum, with Catholics accusing him of supporting the Protestant cause, and vice versa. His importance to mainstream political thinking was immense – he was clearly very much a product of the Renaissance, with its emphasis on humanism rather than religion, and empiricism rather than faith and dogma, and he was the first to take an objective, scientific approach to political history. 91 (145) The term “Machiavellian” is in common usage today, and is usually applied pejoratively to politicians who are perceived (or discovered) to be acting manipulatively and deceitfully. US president Richard Nixon, who attempted to cover up a break-in and wiretapping of his opponent’s headquarters and was forced to resign over the scandal, is a modern-day example of such underhand behaviour. 92 (147) Richard Nixon resigned as US president in 1974. He authorized a break-in and wiretap at the Democratic National Committee headquarters: actions described as “Machiavellian”. 93 (150) Later scholars of the period would base their analysis not on theology, but on pure reason. These are closer to so-called “Enlightenment ideals”. Immanuel Kant coined the term Enlightenment in 1784 to describe the capacity and freedom to use one’s own intelligence without the guidance of others. 94 (152) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Just war FOCUS Colonialism BEFORE 1267–72 Thomas Aquinas writes Summa Theologica, the most influential work of Christian theology in the West. 95 (154) "Ownership and dominion are based either on natural law or human law; therefore they are not destroyed by want of faith." Francisco de Vitoria 96 (157) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Absolutism FOCUS Power of the sovereign BEFORE 380 BCE In the Republic, Plato argues that the ideal state would be ruled by a philosopher king. 97 (157) 1532 CE Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince is published, providing practical advice to sovereigns. AFTER 1648 The Peace of Westphalia creates the modern system of European nation-states. 1651 In Leviathan, Thomas Hobbes argues that rule by an absolute sovereign nonetheless involves a social contract with the people. 1922 Carl Schmitt insists that a sovereign ruler has the right to suspend law in exceptional circumstances, such as 1532 CE Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince is published, providing practical advice to sovereigns. AFTER 1648 The Peace of Westphalia creates the modern system of European nation-states. 1651 In Leviathan, Thomas Hobbes argues that rule by an absolute sovereign nonetheless involves a social contract with the people. 1922 Carl Schmitt insists that a sovereign ruler has the right to suspend law in exceptional circumstances, circumstances, such as war. 98 (159) "The sovereign Prince is accountable only to God." Jean Bodin 99 (161) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Philosophy of law FOCUS Natural and human law BEFORE 1274 Thomas Aquinas distinguishes between natural law and human law in his Summa Theologia. 100 (162) 1517 The Protestant Reformation questions the doctrines of the Catholic Church, and is used to justify the divine right of kings. AFTER 1613 King James I of England bans Suárez’s treatise against Anglicanism, since it criticizes the divine right of kings. 101 (162) 1625 Hugo Grotius writes the first systematic treatise on international law. 1787 The Constitution of the United States refers to natural law as the basis for positive law. 102 (171) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Natural law FOCUS Individual rights BEFORE 1517 The protection of liberty is seen as the fundamental political task of a republic by Niccolò Machiavelli Machiavelli in his Discourses. 1532 Francisco de Vitoria lectures on the rights of peoples at the University of Salamanca. AFTER 1789 The French Revolution – with its demands for liberty, equality, and fraternity – transforms France and the rest of Europe. 103 (171) 1958 Political theorist Isaiah Berlin lectures on the Two Concepts of Liberty: negative liberty (non-interference and the opportunity to be free) and positive liberty (the ability to be one’s own master). 104 (175) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Realism FOCUS Social contract BEFORE 1578 The concepts of sovereignty and the divine right of kings emerge, influenced by The Six Books of the Republic by Jean Bodin. 1642–51 The English Civil War temporarily establishes the precedent that the monarch cannot rule without the consent of Parliament. AFTER 1688 The Glorious Revolution in England leads to the 1689 Bill of Rights, which limits the powers of the monarch in law. 105 (189) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Liberalism FOCUS The rule of law BEFORE 1642 A series of conflicts known as the English Civil War breaks out, due to concerns that Charles I would attempt to introduce absolutism in England. 106 (196) The English Bill of Rights, ratified by King William III in 1689, established limits on the king’s power, conforming with Locke’s contention that a monarch only rules by the consent of the people. 107 (199) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Constitutional politics FOCUS Separation of powers BEFORE 509 BCE After the overthrow of King Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, the Roman Republic is founded, in which a tripartite system of government evolves. 108 (202) The United States Congress is the legislative branch of the federal US government; its powers are separate and distinct from those of the President (executive branch) and the Judiciary. 109 (204) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Liberalism FOCUS Entrepreneurial citizens BEFORE 1760 Britain seizes France’s North American colonies, raising the stakes in its land acquisition in the New World. 110 (204) 1776 Thirteen colonies declare their independence from Britain to become the United States of America. AFTER 1879 Thomas Paine’s Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen is published in France. 1868 Black people are granted citizenship in the United States following the ratification of the 14th amendment to the US Constitution. 111 (204) 1919 Women are granted the vote in the United States through the 19th amendment. 112 (212) IN CONTEXT IDEOLOGY Republicanism FOCUS The general will BEFORE 1513 Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince offers a modern form of politics in which a ruler’s morality and the concerns of state are strictly separate. 113 (1651) Edmund Burke blames Rousseau for the “excesses” of the French Revolution. 114 (224) The French Revolution began when an angry mob stormed the Bastille in Paris on 14 July 1789. The medieval fortress and prison was a symbol of royal power. 115 (1754) Emile 1762 The Social Contract 1770 Confessions See also: Ibn Khaldun 116 (227) Limit of notes set by publisher reached. ok |
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