Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Idealist biographies
- Select bibliography
- A note on the texts
- Evolution and society
- Individualism, collectivism and the general will
- 5 Ideal Morality (1876; revised 1927)
- 6 The Reality of the General Will (1895)
- 7 The Rights of Minorities (1891 and 1893)
- 8 The Dangers of Democracy (1906)
- 9 Individualism and Socialism (1897)
- 10 The Coming of Socialism (1910)
- The State and international relations
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
7 - The Rights of Minorities (1891 and 1893)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Idealist biographies
- Select bibliography
- A note on the texts
- Evolution and society
- Individualism, collectivism and the general will
- 5 Ideal Morality (1876; revised 1927)
- 6 The Reality of the General Will (1895)
- 7 The Rights of Minorities (1891 and 1893)
- 8 The Dangers of Democracy (1906)
- 9 Individualism and Socialism (1897)
- 10 The Coming of Socialism (1910)
- The State and international relations
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought
Summary
In times past government has generally meant the rule of minorities over majorities. Even the most democratic governments of the ancient world were aristocracies of slave-owners. The free citizens of Athens were a democracy among themselves, but an aristocracy, if we think of all the human beings inhabiting Attica. And, even in cases where ‘inhabitants’ and ‘free citizens’ have been nearly convertible terms, cities and states governing themselves democratically have yet denied political rights to subject peoples. The free citizens of Uri allowed their bailiffs to rule despotically the inhabitants of the Ticino valley. Thus, the struggle for freedom has in the past generally been the struggle of the majority against a privileged minority. Where there has been no such struggle, this has been because the majority have acquiesced in their political subordination or have never yet awakened to a sense that anything else is possible except blind obedience to the one or the few. Such political torpor can continue more easily where all alike are the slaves of an absolute despot. Where the practices of free government (i.e., government by discussion, instead of government merely by force) prevail even among a limited number, an example is set, which the many in course of time will desire to imitate. It is therefore more dangerous for a republican than for a monarchical government to practise tyranny or claim exclusive privilege.
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- Information
- The British Idealists , pp. 142 - 155Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997