The idea that kings and queens must've been a "suitable" part of some social structures at some stage in history relies on some standardized conception of "suitability" that we mutually endorse and adopt as a part of our own universally applicable philosophical and linguistic categories. — Average
We would expect likewise that the monarchies would start to fail when having to deal with new and more effective varieties of social organisation. So there would be a time when they stop working as something better has come along. — apokrisis
What is a king if he has no court, no lords and ladies, no knights or servants? There has to be some kind of hierarchy in place otherwise a king lacks all the usual distinctions that would make him any different. — apokrisis
Couldn't a government experience instability as a result of alternative factor such as plague and natural disasters? — Average
I think it is a bit unorthodox for someone to automatically conclude that the only explanation for failure and malfunction in a social system is some form of obsolescence. — Average
The things you mentioned may indeed be correlated with regnal power but may not be causally connected in the sense that they are what gives a king his essence. — Average
Sure. It would have to be resilient in the face of perturbations of all kinds. That is part of the design criteria. — apokrisis
I’m just pointing out where I would start. Which is defining what counts as his “kingdom”. — apokrisis
I don't want to ramble too much so I apologize if some of this is tangential or seems like irrelevant nonsense. — Average
One man's trash is another man's treasure as they say so I don't know if your method is my cup of tea but I think I can appreciate your insistence on definition. — Average
I am asking what does it even mean to be a king except that you have a kingdom. — apokrisis
History has already shown that. — apokrisis
That would basically be a circular definition. At least that's what I think. — Average
How do you know that your understanding or interpretation of history is actually factually grounded. Even if it is why am I under any obligation to accept it as such without doing my own due diligence? Simply asserting things like this doesn't seem that persuasive. — Average
It’s your argument. And you have provided no facts to ground your position. — apokrisis
Now do you really just want opinions or a rational critique of how to take this further? — apokrisis
So any form of human social organisation starts with delivering food and shelter. It then can start to deliver belonging and esteem. — apokrisis
What I'm trying to say is that the simple fact of a famine killing large parts of a nation's population doesn't automatically mean its government is failing in terms of its most important mission. For example the opposite extreme could be overconsumption or overproduction and obesity. — Average
I don't have data. It is a capital mistake to theorize without data. — Sherlock Holmes
Well both are bad. But famine is worse. In reality, no one is forcing your to over-eat, especially if you voted for a self-actualising democracy that makes it your own informed choice. — apokrisis
But famines can kill millions who didn’t want to die. Suicide is a minority pastime. So that’s a false equivalence to draw. — apokrisis
What makes a government legitimate or illegitimate? — Average
I was thinking about this, and what rights a population might have to overthrow the government if it were considered illegitimate. — Hanover
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights — Hanover
What makes a government legitimate or illegitimate? Is it possible for a government to be legit or are all states sus? The entire discussion revolving around legitimacy seems to involve a lot of moral dogma — Average
Self evident principles and conclusions seem like they are probably just lazy philosophy. — Average
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