Is democracy a tool or a goal unto itself? If it is some sort of goal we reach toward, why should we be reaching for it? — frank
I'm with Churchill - it's the 'least worst option'. — Wayfarer
Isn't it segregating in a sense?It is a conjectural belief that democracy would be a viable political system. I strongly suspect that it isn't. — alcontali
But maybe that's the semblance of the current capitalistic democracy, in which case what would merely democracy be? — Shamshir
In "Politics and the English language", George Orwell points out that the term "democracy" resists being given a definition. Therefore, it is a member of the class of "meaningless words". — alcontali
Accordingly, one needs an interpretive layer, such as 'representatives' to examine the will of the people and make as much sense of it as may be, and implement that. — unenlightened
Democracy being moreso bureaucratic than practical makes it freedomness, in my experience. — Shamshir
I'm with Churchill - it's the 'least worst option' — Wayfarer
No, sorry, don't even implement that!
It will become a tool for the populace (of mere idiots) to destroy themselves.
Society is not viable like that. — alcontali
In a so-called democracy, the option exists to invent new laws that will make the survival of society itself, impossible. — alcontali
If it is some sort of goal we reach toward, why should we be reaching for it?
If it's merely a tool (I think it is), what truly is the goal? — frank
The correct principles being determined by philosophy/rationality. But, when we get to the details of exactly how to implement these principles, democracy is an end in and of itself, as it is up to the people being governed to decide these details. — Echarmion
What I am thinking of when I refer to principles is things like the rule of law, fundamental human, political and social rights. Those are things that are not subject to negotiation. — Echarmion
there is a point at which the costs of additional safety will outweigh the benefits. Where exactly that point is cannot be practically determined by argument alone. — Echarmion
That's possible right now, and not to much benefit. — Shamshir
As I've often commented, though, I really couldn't care less what the structure of the government is. What I care about is what laws a government does or doesn't have. I'm no more likely to agree with laws just because they're decided by a majority. — Terrapin Station
Can your question be reformulated as: Is democracy a tool to arrive at correct/rational/just laws or are correct/rational/just laws those laws which have been passed by a democracy? — Echarmion
And there it is - the problem is funding, in other words money.You can work towards those things, but you might not be able to get the opportunities, you might not be able to afford the schooling required, you might not be able to support yourself while pursuing various things, you can't just on a whim decide that you want to do something and begin to do it (at least as an apprentice). — Terrapin Station
So by what measure are they correct then, if not democratic agreement? — Isaac
I'm not seeing the difference at all. If we were to agree on the relative value of the competing harms (say loss of money vs risk to life) then it would absolutely be an empirical matter to determine which strategy yielded the most gain in one for the least loss in the other. — Isaac
I personally don't agree that we can rationally work out the relative values, but that's the bit you seem sure we can, so I'm failing to see why it isn't just a matter of empirical fact which strategy is best from there on. — Isaac
I think you're seeing justice as the purpose of government (or at least part of the purpose?) That's a fascinating perspective and it's a little alien to me. Like Lincoln, I think injustice is just part of life. He believed that democracy is a tool to nurture a kind of awakening to human potential. — frank
I think you could call it "Justice", yes. The purpose of the government is to create a "state of justice", which allows individuals to practice their freedom, which could also be described as awakening their potential.
But my background is in law, which might bias my thinking. — Echarmion
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