| Aristotle - 1921 - Broj stranica: 492
...freemen and citizens, who are not rich and have no personal merit — are both solved. There is still 35 a danger in allowing them to share the great offices...crime. But there is. a danger also in not letting theni share, for a state in which many poor men are excluded from*office will' necessarily be full... | |
| Richard Winn Livingstone - 1924 - Broj stranica: 466
...meet together they become in a manner one man, who has many feet, and hands, and senses. 1 There is a danger in allowing them to share the great offices...excluded from office will necessarily be full of enemies. 2 In practice Aristotle thinks that a government by what we should call the middle and professional... | |
| Richard Winn Livingstone - 1924 - Broj stranica: 474
...meet together they become in a manner one man, who has many feet, and hands, and senses.1 There is a danger in allowing them to share the great offices...are excluded from office will necessarily be full of enemies.2 In practice Aristotle thinks that a government by what we should call the middle and professional... | |
| Horace West Household - 1928 - Broj stranica: 200
...they meet together they become in a manner one man, who has many feet and hands and senses. There is a danger in allowing them to share the great offices...excluded from office will necessarily be full of enemies. Politics, iii. n. 1 As a picnic, he says quaintly, is better than a private banquet. CHAPTER XXIV FROM... | |
| James Miller, Jim Miller - 1984 - Broj stranica: 292
...people some share of power, preferably through carefully supervised participation in public affairs: "A state in which many poor men are excluded from office will necessarily be full of enemies." Though commoners as individuals should be excluded from high office ("their folly will lead them into... | |
| Jeremy Waldron - 1999 - Broj stranica: 224
...of the people. And that is not the case; Aristotle indicates other grounds as well, for example that "a state in which many poor men are excluded from office will necessarily be full of enemies" (67: u81b3o). Ill There are two questions to be addressed, (a) Is DWM true, or at least plausible enough... | |
| Chris Brown, Terry Nardin, Nicholas Rengger - 2002 - Broj stranica: 634
...freemen and citizens, who are not rich and have no personal merit - are both solved. There is still a danger in allowing them to share the great offices...dishonesty into crime. But there is a danger also in not 30 letting them share, for a state in which many poor men are excluded from office will necessarily... | |
| John Schrems - 2004 - Broj stranica: 408
...humankind. He further points to a danger in allowing the mass of people to share the offices of state since "their folly will lead them into error, and their dishonesty into crime," yet, he also maintains that there is danger in excluding large numbers of people from these duties... | |
| Christopher F. Zurn - 2007 - Broj stranica: 14
...for democracy as a stability-enhancing inclusion of the otherwise disgruntled demos: "There is still a danger in allowing them to share the great offices...full of enemies. The only way of escape is to assign them some deliberative and judicial functions," but no direct role in the great offices (128^24-38).... | |
| Broj stranica: 238
...mass of freemen and citizens, who are not rich and have no personal merit? . . . There is a danger allowing them to share the great offices of state,...enemies. The only way of escape is to assign to them some deliberative and judicial functions. For this reason Solon and certain other legislators give... | |
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