Great Political Thinkers, Plato to the PresentWilliam Ebenstein Rinehart, 1951 - 903 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 39
Página 102
... oligarchy , and what they are , and in what aristocracies differ from one another , and polities from aristocracies- that the two latter are not very unlike is ob- vious . Next we have to consider how by the side of oligarchy and ...
... oligarchy , and what they are , and in what aristocracies differ from one another , and polities from aristocracies- that the two latter are not very unlike is ob- vious . Next we have to consider how by the side of oligarchy and ...
Página 107
... oligarchy , and an oligarchy is narrowed to a rule of families ; or in the opposite case constitutional government becomes democracy , and oligarchy either constitutional government or democracy . It is a principle common to democracy ...
... oligarchy , and an oligarchy is narrowed to a rule of families ; or in the opposite case constitutional government becomes democracy , and oligarchy either constitutional government or democracy . It is a principle common to democracy ...
Página 108
... oligarchy to assign to those who have less share in the government ( i . e . to the rich in a democracy and to the poor in an oligarchy ) an equality or preference in all but the principal offices of state . The latter should be ...
... oligarchy to assign to those who have less share in the government ( i . e . to the rich in a democracy and to the poor in an oligarchy ) an equality or preference in all but the principal offices of state . The latter should be ...
Contenido
x | 9 |
Plato The Republic 1 Justice as the Interest of the Stronger | 13 |
Ruling as an Art | 16 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 149 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
according action Adeimantus aristocracy Aristotle authority become Bentham body bourgeois bourgeoisie called century Christian church Cicero citizens civil common commonwealth communist conception constitution democracy democratic desire divine doctrine economic empire England Epictetus equality evil existence Fascism fear force freedom French French Revolution give Glaucon happiness Hobbes human ideas individual interest John of Salisbury judge justice kind king labour laissez-faire law of nature legislative Lenin liberal liberty live Machiavelli mankind Marx matter means ment mind monarchy Montesquieu moral nations natural law never obey oligarchy opinion peace persons philosophy Plato pleasure political Polybius possess prince principle production proletariat punishment reason religion Revolution revolutionary Roman rule ruler slavery slaves social society soul sovereign sovereignty spirit Stoicism things Thomas Aquinas Thomism thought Thrasymachus tion true truth tyrant virtue wealth whole