freediver wrote on May 2
nd, 2016 at 1:50pm:
Why are you trying to restrict me to after 27 BC? On Morris' index the Roman Empire was steady and then declining after then. Is there any particular reason why you want to exclude the dramatic rise in living standards?
We're not talking about living standards, we're discussing the difference between the West and other empires. Your argument is that the Roman Empire (not the Republic) is superior to other empires, such as the Islamic caliphate. The reason?
"Elections".
Unfortunately, you can't substantiate this with any evidence of elections. Nor can you show how past Western models of power are any more inclusive than any other.
No worries. But can I ask, FD - have you read the Ian Morris book? There must be examples in there, shurely.
Quote:Are you saying there were no elections, or that they did not constitute a difference in the distribution of power?
Both. In much of Europe, elections have been held for local councils for centuries - way before the French Revolution. This is an old Angle tradition going back to the Norse, and has little to do with Roman republican or Athenian democratic models.
As for democracy, Alexander the Great is generally held to have done that in. With the rise of empires, city states could no longer defend themselves and manage their affairs. Power
had to go to those who could mobilize and pay armies. The past two millennia of European history is about just this: who had the best armies and how much of the map they shaped.
Popular elections do not need to influence the distribution of power, and in many cases, they don't. Elections were used in the Roman republic to prevent people from overthrowing their leaders. They create a sense of order based on the illusion that the people have a say in their rulers. This was Machiavelli's argument, and when you look at countries like Thailand today, it makes sense. Elections are a tool used by generals to consolidate their coups.
So yes, elections in themselves mean little. Elections are, at best, a tool used by democracies. They are not the be-all and end-all of popular representation. In modern democracies, the biggest fundraisers generally get elected. In republics like Amerika, politicians represent their lobbyists and donors in office, not the people who voted them in.
This is not some new discovery, it goes back to the early theorists on government and the social contract - people like Locke, Hobbes and Rousseau. What we tentatively call democracy today is, at best, a concession to the ideal of democracy. Citizens almost never get direct representation. At the same time, the corporate interests and political backers don't always get their demands either. Citizens (plebeians and patricians) are forced to compromise.
Quote:Again, is there anything in the article you actually disagree with? Is there a point to this? Or do you just want to have a details competition because you don't like the substance?
it's not so much that I don't like the substance. I think the article is incredibly well-written. Good use of plain English, a very easy read, point by point. Good timing, good pacing.
I'm getting to its substance, which from what you've just shown, does not exist. Asking for evidence of elections is not a details competition when it's your only argument. If you don't have any evidence of what you're saying, why say it? Someone like me is inevitably going to come along and point this out. That's why we post on a discussion board, not a blog.
Presumably, we're trying to uncover a form of truth here, not just spew out our views and expect them to be blindly swallowed. This, remember, is what the internet is supposed to deliver: interactive discussion and peer-review. It's meant to be an evolution of one-way mass media like radio - a propaganda tool.
At its core, the "substance" of the article is ludicrous: the West is better than Islam because we have elections and they have inbreeding.
But the West did not have elections for 2000 years, and the Roman empire had far more inbreeding than the caliphate. And how do we know?
According to Matty's IQ article, the Arabs interbred with African slaves - slaves who, as you've said - could gain their freedom by converting to Islam.
So there, in a nutshell, is why the caliphate was more "inclusive" than the Roman republic and empire: slaves could become citizens. This could never happen in Rome, a province where the vast majority of those within its borders were slaves and non-citizens.
And remember, in neither of these empires did citizens get to vote for their leaders.