Government = The consequent system of humanity's free and successful interactions per individual. — Gus Lamarch
Government = The consequent system of humanity's free and successful interactions per individual.
This statement presumes that success in interactions is bilateral. — simeonz
We may be talking about the top of the hierarchy of power, especially those who make the decisions. — Jack Cummins
I would say selfishness, fear, balance and moderation into the nature of humankind. Every citizen wants to be "free" but how free? This is when the government appears.
The system of "rule of law" will limit us in the behaviour inside of the state. Therefore, the government wants to put limits in our nature. — javi2541997
Not sure I follow this. Can you express this via an example in action even if theoretical. — Tom Storm
At the moment, it appears to me to be rather abstract. — Jack Cummins
but I am a bit troubled by your use of the word, 'perversity'. — Jack Cummins
@Gus LamarchHowever, I do not see the human being as someone of a "collective" nature, but instead, of "individual" nature
Throughout the recorded history of mankind, the concept of "Government" had only been functionally expressed through its establishment through the "State", which creates order through the use of fear. — Gus Lamarch
Perversity here, understand not only as being something attached to reason. All kinds of perversity - sexual, idealistic, physical, rational, irrational, etc... - are considered something that turns that individual no longer capable of conceiving and participating of the "Government". — Gus Lamarch
I am a Hobbsian. — Tom Storm
I wish one day we can say we are allowed to live in individualism. — javi2541997
Karl Marx — javi2541997
Athens had a democratic form of government. Athens wasn't a state. — Benkei
“Society is produced by our wants and government by our wickedness; the former promotes our happiness positively by uniting our affections, the latter negatively by restraining our vices”. — NOS4A2
But only because government is expressed through the state, and not through the indirect interaction of individuals. — Gus Lamarch
True "individual" died when the State was born, since the focus of society was no longer the Unique, but rather the citizen - aka, the concept that represents the individual as being intrinsic property of the government. Thing that it is not -. — Gus Lamarch
- can you provide any examples where a robust egoist system has been achieved or close to being achieved? — Tom Storm
But is due to about how complex the society is. — javi2541997
however, the elites pre-established by the State always end up using collectivism, because with collectivism, you destroy individualism and maintain the structure intact, which keeps them in full control of political power. — Gus Lamarch
Athens was a polis. — Benkei
Elites always have been one of the troubles that we the citizens have to face in the government. When you deposit your vote in an urn you think you are doing it to change the government for better. Nevertheless the reality is so different. We have to face some interests or powers that are literally occult from our eyes.
Exactly in this point we can point some classical organisations as Elites: richest, lords, masons, etc... — javi2541997
The elites who remain in power with political power only remain because the "individual" has been dominated by the structure. — Gus Lamarch
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