Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
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Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
We owe to the ancient Greeks much, if not most of our own current political vocabulary. All the way from anarchy and democracy to politics itself. But their politics and ours are very different beasts. To an ancient Greek democrat (of any stripe), all our modern democratic systems would count as “oligarchy”. By that I mean the rule of and by – if not necessarily or expressly for – the few, as opposed to the power or control of the people, or the many (demo-kratia).
That is the case even if – and indeed because – the few happen to be elected to serve by (all) the people. For in ancient Greece elections were considered to be in themselves oligarchic. They systematically favoured the few and, more particularly, the few extremely rich citizens – or “oligarchs”, as we now familiarly call them thanks to Boris Berezhovsky and his kind, who are also known as “plutocrats” or just “fat cats”.
On the other hand, there are some significant commonalities between ancient and modern ways of thinking politically. To both ancient and modern democrats, for example, freedom and equality are of the essence – they are core political values. However, freedom to an ancient Greek democrat didn’t just mean the freedom to participate in the political process but also freedom from legal servitude, from being an actual slave chattel.
And freedom to participate meant not just the sort of occasional saturnalia that we take to be the key mode of democracy for most of us – a temporary exchange of roles by political masters and slaves come general or local election (or referendum) time. But rather the freedom actually to share political power, to rule on an almost day-to-day basis.
In the fourth century BC(E), the Athenian democratic assembly of 6,000-plus adult male citizens met on average every nine days or so. It was government by mass meeting, but also the equivalent of holding a referendum on major issues every other week.
Statistical data are lacking – the ancients were notoriously unbureaucratic and they considered direct personal taxation to be a civic insult. But it’s plausibly been argued that “Classical” (5th-4th century BCE) Greece and especially Classical Athens were more populous and urbanised societies, with a higher proportion of their population living above the level of mere subsistence – and with a more equal distribution of property ownership – than has been the case in Greece at any time since, or indeed than in pretty much any other pre-modern society.
This does not mean that ancient Greece can supply us with a directly transferable example for democratic imitation – we tend to believe formally in the absolute equality of all citizens at any rate as adult voters, regardless of gender, and not to believe in the validity or utility of the legal enslavement of human beings as chattels.
However, there are a number of ancient democratic notions and techniques that do seem highly attractive: the use of sortition, for instance – a random method of polling by lottery that aimed to produce a representative sample of elected officials. Or the practice of ostracism – which allowed the population to nominate a candidate who had to go into exile for 10 years, thus ending their political career.
And comparison, or rather contrast, of our democracies with those of ancient Greece does serve to highlight what’s been called creeping crypto-oligarchy in our own very different (representative, not direct) democratic systems.
Most pertinently at the moment, it was possible for the US and the UK to go to war in Iraq in 2003, even though neither US president George W Bush nor the UK prime minister, Tony Blair, had at any point received the endorsement for that decision from the majority of their own citizens.
Citizens in our “democracies” spend up to one-fifth of their lives governed by a party or candidate other than the party or candidate that most of them voted for at the last election. Moreover, elections are not in fact “free and fair”: they’re nearly invariably won by the side that spends the most money, and thus are more or less corrupted thereby.
When it comes to winning elections, no party has ever come to power without (blatantly self-interested) corporate backing in one shape or another. And, perhaps most damning of all, the vast majority of people are systematically excluded from public decision-making – thanks to vote-skewing, campaign financing and the right of elected representatives simply to ignore with impunity anything that happens in between (local or general) elections.
Democracy in short has changed its meaning from anything like the “people power” of ancient Greece and has seemingly lost its purpose as a reflection let alone realisation of the popular will.
One can well see why Winston Churchill was once moved to describe democracy as the worst of all systems of government – apart from all the rest. But that should be no good reason for us to continue ignoring the widely admitted democratic deficit. Back to the future – with the democrats of ancient Greece.
Paul Cartledge, A.G. Leventis Senior Research Fellow, Clare College, University of Cambridge
http://www.rawstory.com/2016/06/ancient-greeks-would-not-recognize-our-democracy-theyd-see-an-oligarchy/
That is the case even if – and indeed because – the few happen to be elected to serve by (all) the people. For in ancient Greece elections were considered to be in themselves oligarchic. They systematically favoured the few and, more particularly, the few extremely rich citizens – or “oligarchs”, as we now familiarly call them thanks to Boris Berezhovsky and his kind, who are also known as “plutocrats” or just “fat cats”.
On the other hand, there are some significant commonalities between ancient and modern ways of thinking politically. To both ancient and modern democrats, for example, freedom and equality are of the essence – they are core political values. However, freedom to an ancient Greek democrat didn’t just mean the freedom to participate in the political process but also freedom from legal servitude, from being an actual slave chattel.
And freedom to participate meant not just the sort of occasional saturnalia that we take to be the key mode of democracy for most of us – a temporary exchange of roles by political masters and slaves come general or local election (or referendum) time. But rather the freedom actually to share political power, to rule on an almost day-to-day basis.
In the fourth century BC(E), the Athenian democratic assembly of 6,000-plus adult male citizens met on average every nine days or so. It was government by mass meeting, but also the equivalent of holding a referendum on major issues every other week.
Equality then and now
Equality today is but a pipe dream at best, at least in socioeconomic terms, when the richest 1% of the world’s population owns as much as the remaining 99% put together. They managed these things a whole lot better in ancient Greece, and especially in the ancient Athenian democracy.Statistical data are lacking – the ancients were notoriously unbureaucratic and they considered direct personal taxation to be a civic insult. But it’s plausibly been argued that “Classical” (5th-4th century BCE) Greece and especially Classical Athens were more populous and urbanised societies, with a higher proportion of their population living above the level of mere subsistence – and with a more equal distribution of property ownership – than has been the case in Greece at any time since, or indeed than in pretty much any other pre-modern society.
This does not mean that ancient Greece can supply us with a directly transferable example for democratic imitation – we tend to believe formally in the absolute equality of all citizens at any rate as adult voters, regardless of gender, and not to believe in the validity or utility of the legal enslavement of human beings as chattels.
However, there are a number of ancient democratic notions and techniques that do seem highly attractive: the use of sortition, for instance – a random method of polling by lottery that aimed to produce a representative sample of elected officials. Or the practice of ostracism – which allowed the population to nominate a candidate who had to go into exile for 10 years, thus ending their political career.
And comparison, or rather contrast, of our democracies with those of ancient Greece does serve to highlight what’s been called creeping crypto-oligarchy in our own very different (representative, not direct) democratic systems.
Worst of all possible systems
We are all democrats now, aren’t we? Or are we? Not if we consider the following five flaws variously embedded in all contemporary systems.Most pertinently at the moment, it was possible for the US and the UK to go to war in Iraq in 2003, even though neither US president George W Bush nor the UK prime minister, Tony Blair, had at any point received the endorsement for that decision from the majority of their own citizens.
Citizens in our “democracies” spend up to one-fifth of their lives governed by a party or candidate other than the party or candidate that most of them voted for at the last election. Moreover, elections are not in fact “free and fair”: they’re nearly invariably won by the side that spends the most money, and thus are more or less corrupted thereby.
When it comes to winning elections, no party has ever come to power without (blatantly self-interested) corporate backing in one shape or another. And, perhaps most damning of all, the vast majority of people are systematically excluded from public decision-making – thanks to vote-skewing, campaign financing and the right of elected representatives simply to ignore with impunity anything that happens in between (local or general) elections.
Democracy in short has changed its meaning from anything like the “people power” of ancient Greece and has seemingly lost its purpose as a reflection let alone realisation of the popular will.
One can well see why Winston Churchill was once moved to describe democracy as the worst of all systems of government – apart from all the rest. But that should be no good reason for us to continue ignoring the widely admitted democratic deficit. Back to the future – with the democrats of ancient Greece.
Paul Cartledge, A.G. Leventis Senior Research Fellow, Clare College, University of Cambridge
http://www.rawstory.com/2016/06/ancient-greeks-would-not-recognize-our-democracy-theyd-see-an-oligarchy/
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
OP wrote:Equality today is but a pipe dream at best, at least in socioeconomic terms, when the richest 1% of the world’s population owns as much as the remaining 99% put together. They managed these things a whole lot better in ancient Greece, and especially in the ancient Athenian democracy.
Utter trash. The concept of equality was unheard of in the 4th-Century world. The emergence of equality was the result of individual conscience, begun by Martin Luther, in 1517. As man moved away from the incorporating influence of the Church of Rome, and its priesthood, morality (God) became associated with the individual acting in his sole capacity. When it came to politics (much later), each individual was given his count, and thus equality was born.
In the late 6th-century BCE, the concept of equivalency was barely a principle in the Pythagoran school of mathematics. Their philosophy of numeralism attached ontological significance to numbers, which was a non-starter.
This is a classic example of taking modern ideas and superimposing them onto another age--an age that has no experience in the idea, even if it works. It's wishful thinking.
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
Original Quill wrote:OP wrote:Equality today is but a pipe dream at best, at least in socioeconomic terms, when the richest 1% of the world’s population owns as much as the remaining 99% put together. They managed these things a whole lot better in ancient Greece, and especially in the ancient Athenian democracy.
Utter trash. The concept of equality was unheard of in the 4th-Century world. The emergence of equality was the result of individual conscience, begun by Martin Luther, in 1717. As man moved away from the incorporating influence of the Church of Rome, and its priesthood, morality (God) became associated with the individual acting in his sole capacity. When it came to politics (much later), each individual was given his count, and thus equality was born.
In the late 6th-century BCE, the concept of equivalency was barely a principle in the Pythagoran school of mathematics. Their philosophy of numeralism attached ontological significance to numbers, which was a non-starter.
Incorrect, there certainly was equality in Celtic societies and even in the Spartan society for women.
As much as it had slavery it certainly was far more advanced than many for women have equal rights, so you simply have not a clue what you are talking about. Celtic and Spartan women, could own property and were treated with respect and could inherit. In Celtic societies they could even rule. So you really again have nop idea what you ar talking about.
The only people that had a grave in Sparta was those who died in battle, and women who died in childbirth.
You are missing the point being said and you clearly did not read the article which eldues to the fact they never had true democracy itself or stated about having equality, but it certainly existed at the time within some societies.
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
ANCIENT GREECE a "democracy" ?!?
WHAT A LOAD of fallacoius crappola...
1. Women didn't have the vote !
That cuts out 51% of the population..
2. To earn the right to vote, men must have: (a) done their military service -- i.e. served in the army; and (b) be a land owner !
That removes half of their adult male population from the vote..
SO, EFFECTIVELY less than a quarter of the adult population in Ancient Greece's fledgling 'democracy' had that right to vote...
Doesn't really sound all that "democratic" to me, to be honest..
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
Didge, I not only read the article, but I did a PhD dissertation on PreSocratic philosophy and its influence on early modern British political thought.
This kind of stuff is what comes from to much tofu smoke. The topic is not Celtic or any other later culture, incidentally. It's the kind of thing that comes out of second-rate, or lo-rent schools. If you are reading this kind of crap, that answers a lot of questions.
This kind of stuff is what comes from to much tofu smoke. The topic is not Celtic or any other later culture, incidentally. It's the kind of thing that comes out of second-rate, or lo-rent schools. If you are reading this kind of crap, that answers a lot of questions.
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
Original Quill wrote:Didge, I not only read the article, but I did a PhD dissertation on PreSocratic philosophy and its influence on early modern British political thought.
This kind of stuff is what comes from to much tofu smoke. The topic is not Celtic or any other later culture, incidentally. It's the kind of thing that comes out of second-rate, or lo-rent schools. If you are reading this kind of crap, that answers a lot of questions.
Really Quill, is that why you did not know the things I just stated?
The terminology may not have been known at the time, but it certainly was practiced at the time within societies the point you miss.
Spartans are greek
The Celts also existed even before this time
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
Paul Ettinger wrote:Original Quill wrote:Didge, I not only read the article, but I did a PhD dissertation on PreSocratic philosophy and its influence on early modern British political thought.
This kind of stuff is what comes from to much tofu smoke. The topic is not Celtic or any other later culture, incidentally. It's the kind of thing that comes out of second-rate, or lo-rent schools. If you are reading this kind of crap, that answers a lot of questions.
Really Quill, is that why you did not know the things I just stated?
The terminology may not have been known at the time, but it certainly was practiced at the time within societies the point you miss.
Spartans are greek
The only thing that came outta you was some kind of weird nonsense. You can play with ideas and forms of ideas, but history goes from past to later. That's axiomatic.
Equality and Pericles, indeed.
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
Original Quill wrote:Paul Ettinger wrote:
Really Quill, is that why you did not know the things I just stated?
The terminology may not have been known at the time, but it certainly was practiced at the time within societies the point you miss.
Spartans are greek
The only thing that came outta you was some kind of weird nonsense. You can play with ideas and forms of ideas, but history goes from past to later. That's axiomatic.
Equality and Pericles, indeed.
And we are back to:
Divert, Deflect and cover up.
See it happens everytime
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
Spartans are Spartans and not democratic they are an oligrachy
so greek democracy was highly mysogynic and a slave based economy
Spartan(greek if you want) Oligracy had equality and massive slavery
You just really fucked up your point with the spartans
plus the Whole SLAVERY things sort of renders all those points moot
so greek democracy was highly mysogynic and a slave based economy
Spartan(greek if you want) Oligracy had equality and massive slavery
You just really fucked up your point with the spartans
plus the Whole SLAVERY things sort of renders all those points moot
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Re: Ancient Greeks would not recognize our ‘democracy’ – they’d see an ‘oligarchy’
WhoseYourWolfie wrote:
ANCIENT GREECE a "democracy" ?!?
WHAT A LOAD of fallacoius crappola...
1. Women didn't have the vote !
That cuts out 51% of the population..
2. To earn the right to vote, men must have: (a) done their military service -- i.e. served in the army; and (b) be a land owner !
That removes half of their adult male population from the vote..
SO, EFFECTIVELY less than a quarter of the adult population in Ancient Greece's fledgling 'democracy' had that right to vote...
Doesn't really sound all that "democratic" to me, to be honest..
Again the article eludes to the point they were not proper democrats themselves as again is within these societies that the rich ruled and were voted in
The point being made to quill who thinks equality did not exist at the time is wrong.
Both the Celts and Spartans were not democratic but had equality for women, the point you and others are missing.
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