Filimon Peonidis, Thessaloniki:
AristotleÕs Relevance to Modern
Democratic Theory
Abstract: In this essay instead of trying to deal with the
dubious question whether Aristotle is a democratic or an oligarchic thinker, I
try to investigate whether he has developed particular views that can be
constructively engaged by modern democratic theory. I argue that we can locate
a rough model of democracy in Aristotle (as well as in Isocrates) in which
direct and representative democracy successfully converge and complement each
other. This model is indispensable for reflecting on the nature and the future
course of contemporary liberal democracy. In addition, Aristotle was the first
thinker who conceived the idea that democratic procedures may be epistemically
valuable and he put forward two original arguments to that effect. The first of
them, the summation argument, despite its ingenuity, does not seem to work, but
the second, the user argument, can still serve as a starting-point for a
plausible justification of popular sovereignty.
¯
zurŸck
zur homepage
¯
zurŸck
zum Gesamtinhaltsverzeichnis