Sartori Theory of Democracy
Sartori Theory of Democracy
Sartori Theory of Democracy
State comes from the Latin status, which as such simply means a condition
or state of being. Machiavelli reified state as an impersonal entity in its
modern understanding, however he mainly referred to regnum (kingdom) or
civitas (when republican). Hobbes favored the word commonwealth while
Bodin used sovereignty from the medieval imperium. As state gained
currency, it became less and less coextensive with res publica (the politically
organized society as a whole) and more narrowly identified with the
structures of command.
Thus, had the Greeks conceived the state as we do, the notion of
democratic state would have seemed to them a contradiction. The
democracy of the ancients was stateless and it thus cannot teach us
anything about conducting a democratic system.
It is also a difference of ends and values between ancient and modern. After
the Western civilization has experienced Christianity, humanism, the
Reformation, natural rights and liberalism, the idea of democracy has
changed in more than 2000 years. Moreover, all modern democracies are
indirect while the democracy of antiquity was undoubtedly the closest
possible approximation to a literal democracy.
In present democracies, there are those who govern and those who are
governed; there is the state, on one side and the citizens on the other; there
are those who deal with politics professionally and those who forget about it,
except at rare intervals. In ancient democracies, instead, these
differentiations had very little meaning.
History attests that the Greek democracies and the medieval communes that
somehow replicated them had a turbulent as well as ephemeral existence.
Aristotle called democracy the government of the poor who governed in
their own interest.
The debate in this field was opened in 1819 by Benjamin Constant, followed
by Tocqueville and Laboulaye. In essence, men of antiquity were not free
(related to their polity) according to the modern notion of individual freedom.
Individual liberty was unknown to the Greeks.
The distinction between public and private spheres was unknown and
unintelligible. For the Greeks, man and citizen meant the exactly same thing.
Participating in the life of the polis meant to live. In ancient times the
individual was not conceived as a person, not to mention a private self.
This only came with Christianity and the Renaissance, Reform and the
modern school of natural law. Ancient democracy did not respect the
individual, it tended to suspect him.
Therefore, the basic difference between the ancient and modern conception
of freedom lies precisely in that we believe that a man is more than a citizen
of a state.
Only Robespierre used the word democracy, only at the end, ensuring its bad
reputation.