РефератыИностранный языкPoPolitical Philosophy Essay Research Paper Political philosophys

Political Philosophy Essay Research Paper Political philosophys

Political Philosophy Essay, Research Paper


Political philosophy?s are the theories and ideas of those who believe that


they have an answer to the questions that politics raise in society. The


questions that these political philosophers set out to answer range from


describing what the state of nature is to what type of regimes are necessary to


tame and organize the nature of man. The ideas that they come up with are not


all that original. Plato, an early political philosopher and student of


Socrates, set out to come up with a society that would function properly. His


ideal society would consist of rulers, guardians, and the masses. All of which


are molded at a young age to play a societal role in order to contribute to the


betterment of their social arena. Plato has gone down in history as one of the


better political philosophers to ever live, and arguably the best. While looking


at what a society needs, he was able to recognize the needs of a society as well


as the needs of the individual. He # humbled the ego of man, when he


acknowledged that one individual could not survive on his own and that all


people are dependent on others to survive. His idea of an organized community


has been the focus of many political philosophy debates and has been a stepping


stone from which many philosophers have created their own ideal social


environment. Though their theories may not be identical to Plato?s, signs of


his structures are definitely evident. Thomas Hobbes, a political philosopher in


the seventeenth century, had many theories and ideas that seemed to have


coincided with Plato?s thoughts. Hobbes view of the state of nature was a very


primitive one. He felt that in the state of nature there was a war of every man


against every man to survive. In the natural state, justice was impossible,


because without set limits and structures, everyone has the rights to everything


and anarchy is almost inevitable. The only way to escape the unfortunate fate of


anarchy would be for everyone to agree to a covenant. In this covenant, all the


people would give up their rights and create a sovereign. The conditions of the


covenant was to give the sovereign full discretion in dealing with citizens. It


was up to the sovereign to protect the lives of the citizens. Quite ironically,


the sovereign also had the right to have any citizen # killed. Fortunately, the


citizens did not give up their right to fight back and were allowed to, usually


to no avail. As long as the sovereign was keeping the majority of citizens alive


and maintaining absolute power, the covenant would be considered successful and


a civil society would have been created. The covenant proposed in Leviathan, was


meant to help keep the common good of peace. As long as people weren?t killing


each other the common good was being reached and the monarchy was considered


successful. If people continued to kill each other the covenant of the absolute


sovereign would be looked upon as tyranny. This is clearly comparable to


Plato?s theory of a civil society. Plato pointed out how no one person could


survive by them self or without the help of a controlled civil society. Hobbes


takes Plato?s idea of men dependent upon other men, to extremes when he


reveals that men will kill each other in order to survive. WHY? Because other


people have what we need in order to maintain our lives, whether it be property,


food or etc. But why do we need a civil society? Hobbes, again is playing off


Plato?s acknowledgement of the selfishness of man. Because people are selfish


and are willing to do whatever it takes to live, they are going to violate


others in order to better themselves. Only in a # society where restrictions and


laws are placed upon people, will people begin to work with one another instead


of against one another in the effort to survive together and use the resources


and expertise that each person has to offer. Though Hobbes? way of governing


this communal society is a bit different than Plato, it still stems from the


same premise. The sovereign that Hobbes describes will be given complete


discretion and is trusted to act on what is best for the overall community.


Likewise, Plato?s rulers are trusted to bring the community together in the


hopes of making a strong and flourishing civil society. A definite difference


between the two rulers of Hobbes and Plato is that Plato?s ruler would be


naturally picked by the individual?s inherent wisdom. His ruler would be


someone who was born wise and meant to be in the ruling position. Hobbes?


ruler would be someone who the citizens picked and acknowledged as the absolute


sovereign in the societies covenant. Alexis De Tocqueville, a political


philosopher of the nineteenth century, is another good example of a philosopher


who?s ideas where simply branches of Plato?s philosophical roots. Coming


from an aristocracy in France, De Tocqueville went to America to study the


prison system. Instead of following through with this study, he found himself


intrigued with the political # system that occupied America. His work, Democracy


in America, became a political comparison between Aristocracy and Democracy.


Instead of looking at the behavior of people in the primitive state of nature,


like Plato and Hobbes, he focused on the present and what would be the best


political structure for the societies that people were currently in. This way of


building his political beliefs was different than Plato?s and Hobbes? way of


coming up with their theories, but was still effective in helping him analyze


what type of societal structure would most effectively contribute to the common


good of each communities individuals. Being from France, De Tocqueville was


intrigued by the amount of political freedom that all people, from the lowest to


the highest social classes were entitled to. It amazed him how the United States


could manage to maintain such a strong political system without having a central


dominating party that had the final say in what laws were passed. Much to his


surprise, people of even the lowest financial class were able to give an opinion


as to what rules and laws the government should pass. This was evident in the


U.S. judicial system, were every person was capable of being on a jury and


deciding the fate of another person. The person on trial was not simply heard by


a single superior being, but instead was given the chance to convey his side of


the case to # a jury of many people. This gave the plaintiff an equal shot at


justice despite what his social status may be. Because the jury was randomly


selected amongst all citizens, from all social statures. This judicial system


protected the rights of the individuals and maintained the nations declaration


of the common good. The jury that is selected would be comparable to Plato?s


guardians, who?s job was to defend what the founders had established.


Likewise, the jury?s job is to make sure that everyone gets a fair shot at


justice, a right that America?s founders set out to uphold. Among other


things, De Tocqueville was dumb founded by the ease with which people were able


to voice their opinions. And, despite their opinions, people seemed more willing


to follow the rules and laws that the nation set, even if the weren?t in favor


of them. He came to the conclusion that, ?…as long as the majority is still


undecided, discussion is carried on, but as soon as its decision is irrevocably


pronounced, every one is silent, and the friends as well as the opponents of the


measure unite in assenting to its propriety?(De Tocqueville, Princeton


Readings of Political Thought,p.416). Because decisions such as, what laws and


rules to pass, are decided by a majority after weighing the pros and cons,


people are more willing to yield to the ruling because it has been fairly #


analyzed and presented by both sides, not just by a monarch with absolute power


and say. The absence of a monarch in America was to assure that the goal of the


common good would never be endangered by injustice. The way that America handles


it?s citizens, allows for amendments to laws and an equal chance for everyone


to succeed, regardless of individual?s preceding family histories. Here we are


able to see another similarity to Plato?s Republic when De Tocqueville directs


his attention to how the people of America work together to build a strong


community, instead of fighting each other to survive, they are aware of their


dependency upon others. One person cannot pass a law in America

, a majority vote


is needed in order to pass laws that are in the best interest of the country as


a whole, not just an individual. De Tocqueville, explored the common good of


America and was able to locate the precise reasoning as to why the United


States? political system could continue to progress in such a democratic


framework without any major outbursts of anarchy. After dissecting the political


system and people of the country, his conclusion became clear. People in the


United States have come from many different origins and have come together in


search of a common good. The common good that became the foundation of America


was independence, that # could only be fully found in a democratic society. Many


of the people that came to the United States, came from places of oppression and


monarchal rule and were deathly afraid of any monarchal reoccurrence. With the


founding fathers of the United States all in agreement that they wanted a secure


system that would prohibit any type of monarchy, the common good of equality and


freedom for all citizens came into play. This agreement, though quite different


in content, was equivalent to the covenant that Hobbes? society abided by, in


that it was an agreement that everyone honored. What baffled De Tocqueville, was


why such a democratic configuration wouldn?t be feasible in Europe. In his


comparison study he confronted the reasons as to why the specific democratic


system of America was viable there, but not in his native Europe. The


justification that he came up with is actually quite interesting. The


aristocratic ways of Europe have been so engraved in their political system,


that any attempt at complete Democracy would cause more conflicts than


compliments to their social arena. People in Europe are enthralled by their past


ancestry and culture. Because these people are leading lives with such social


segregation, any glimpse of complete equality would lead to more upheavals than


celebrations. Bringing people of # lower classes and higher classes to a point


where they are no longer separated by financial or family restraints would cause


more chaos on the society. With people holding their ancestry so close to their


hearts, feelings of spite and harshness are bound to deliver a mass anarchy,


that would outweigh the societal unity that would normally be expected with the


budding of equality and independence. Democracy would not be in the interest of


the European countries because of the nature of their citizens, and the strong


traditional feelings that they hold. The common good of Europe is not


necessarily the same as America?s. De Tocqueville deducted an answer that


seemed to be pretty accurate when looking at the two government structures. He


was very practical when he decided to base his social ideals on the present


situations of people, instead of trying to start from the very primitive and


natural stages of humans. Though this aspect of his research is different than


Plato?s and Hobbes?, it still allowed him to come up with a pretty similar


solution to the two preceding philosophers. De Tocqueville?s way of looking at


society allowed him to see that though a Democracy may be the best way for


America to reach it?s common good, a Democracy may not be as efficient when


dealing with the different communities of Europe. Karl Marx, a political


philosopher from the nineteenth # century, is another very well known


philosopher. Just like Plato, Hobbes and De Tocqueville, Marx had a vision of


how a community that is segregated by social classes could possibly take up a


new governmental structure that would best help all the citizens of the society,


not just the aristocracies of the area. His ideal society would be


?classless?. Marx saw society?s structure to be a result of history, that


would eventually smooth it?s way out. The beginning means to his plan of the


?classless? society would commence when a movement towards ending capitalism


took effect. He saw capitalism as a way in which the bourgeoisie exploited their


workers in order to increase the value of their productions. Unfortunately for


capitalism, it had a lethal and self-destructive characteristic that would bring


an end to it. This ruinous trait was it?s voracious need to compete and


dominate the production market. The competition of the producers to produce more


and in turn exploit their workers more, would eventually cause some of the


producers to go out of business. With less competition there would be more lower


level and oppressed proletarians. The effect of having more proletarians than


middle class citizens changed the society from being a capitalist community to a


community of socialism. Eventually, this ever changing society would change from


socialist environment # to a ?classless? society. Marx held firmly that


industrialism would be the key to the ?classless? society. He calculated


that more machines bearing the brunt of production would liberate humans from


the harsh labor that they had endured. Because machines can produce more in a


shorter period of time than humans, he speculated that their would be enough


produce to allow everyone to live a generous life. Hence, everyone would have an


equal means to a good life and the society would turn from an aristocracy to a


?classless? society. This ?classless? atmosphere would be a communist


environment where no one person owns land, but instead the property and goods


produced on property would be custody of the state, not the individuals of the


state. Karl Marx?s theory of the state being the owner of all property, in a


sense, put all people in the state on an equal level. Because the state owned


all the produce and property, they were able to distribute the goods to all the


citizens. This would reassure that all citizens well-beings were being met, thus


the common good would be attained. Because of Marx?s sensitivity towards the


proletariat class and their needs, as well as the needs of the middle class, his


theories were merely concepts that would help meet the common good # of the


state as a whole, not just the elite. Marx?s mentality is what puts him in the


same class as Plato, Hobbes and De Tocqueville. He sought a means towards


improving the community; communism was the final concept he came up with, that


he felt could enhance the living styles of all the people within his social


arena. The ideas of Hobbes, De Tocqueville and Marx were all ways of making the


means meet with an end. They all sought to provide a communal environment where


all citizens could live without bias?. Though Hobbes sought a monarchy, with


one sovereign to lead the state, and De Tocqueville discovered that what is good


for one state is not necessarily good for another and Marx founded a communist


government he thought would best work for his state; doesn?t mean that they


did not all share a common goal. It is obvious through their thoughts and words


that each of these philosophers focused an immense amount of their attention


towards forming the perfect political structures to manage the citizens of their


states with. All three of them shared the same goal, their goal was to seek out


the finest solutions that would resolve the dilemmas that their states faced,


they were all on a quest for the common good. The only thing that separates


these writers is the means they used, in an attempt to satisfy the end…the #


common good. Plato was the earliest of all the presented philosophers. His ideas


and aspirations were all based on the knowledge that he acquired from his


teacher, Socrates, and his own experiences. His thoughts of pursuing a common


good for a community of people, not just for an individual, were foundational


thoughts that had a drastic carry through on political philosophers that would


follow. Hobbes, De Tocqueville and Marx have had noteworthy effects on the


political systems that have emerged; but I can say with confidence, that at the


root of their philosophical writings, is the seedling that Plato first planted.


Plato?s thoughts were the first seedlings and roots in the search for the


common good. Hobbes?, De Tocqueville?s and Marx?s writings are the


branches that have flourished from Plato?s seedlings. The ideas and theories


of political philosophy owe a great deal to Plato. Without Plato?s initial


seedlings, we wouldn?t have the strong foundation that has allowed us to


obtain the means which has allowed us to come even closer to achieving the


ultimate common good of society.

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