The
Athenian Constitution: Government by Jury and Referendum
by
Roderick T. Long
by Roderick T. Long
This
article was published in the Autumn 1996 issue of Formulations
formerly
a publication of the Free Nation Foundation, now
published by the Libertarian
Nation Foundation.
"Each
single one of our citizens, in all the manifold aspects of life,
is able to show himself the rightful lord and owner of his own
person,
and do this, moreover, with exceptional grace and exceptional
versatility."
~ Perikles (c. 495429 BC)
Athens:
A Neglected Model
Those engaged
in the project of designing a constitution for a new libertarian
nation can learn from the example of previous free or semi-free
nations. In previous issues of Formulations we have accordingly
surveyed sample constitutions ranging from the mediæval Icelandic
system of competing assemblies to the U. S. Articles of Confederation.
One example that is not often considered when libertarians discuss
constitutional design is ancient Athens.
In a way this
is not surprising. Athens in the fifth and fourth centuries BC is
famous for being the purest, most extreme form of democracy in human
history. Most libertarians get understandably nervous at the thought
of unlimited majority rule. Moreover, the leading thinkers of the
classical liberal tradition, from Montesquieu and Madison to Isabel
Paterson, learned their Greek history from upper-class writers like
Thucydides and Xenophon, Plato and Aristotle, Polybius and Plutarch,
and absorbed from them their bias against the democratic institutions
of Athens. (The anti-Athenian bias in Alexander Hamilton's capsule
history of the Peloponnesian War in the Federalist
Papers is so extreme as to be ludicrous;1
and Madison is not much better.)
Nevertheless,
the Athenian constitution deserves our consideration. In its heyday,
Athens was the freest nation in the world. The Athenian definition
of "liberty" was, in private matters, "living as one pleases," and
in public matters, "ruling and being ruled in turn." By and large
Athens lived up to these ideals. The Athenian statesman Perikles,
in a famous funeral oration, boasted that in Athens no one even
got sour looks from his neighbors if he chose to live his own life
in his own way an exaggeration, no doubt, but one with which
Athens' critics agreed, charging that Athens was, in Plato's words,
a supermarket where everyone could pick his own constitution, as
if each person were living under a different regime of his own choosing.
Unlike most Greek states, Athens exercised no control over education;
to the consternation of the philosophers, who favored the Spartan
system of compulsory state indoctrination, parents could arrange
to have their children taught what and as they pleased. Moreover,
the Athenians prided themselves on being as strict with their public
officials as they were lenient toward their neighbors; according
to Perikles, "we are free and tolerant in our private lives; but
in public affairs we keep to the law." (Thucydides, II. 37.)
Athens was
especially famous for its intellectual freedom. This freedom had
its limits, of course; unpopular thinkers, for example, were sometimes
prosecuted for departing from religious orthodoxy (Sokrates being
the most famous case). Still, Athenian freedom of thought and speech
was robust enough to attract controversial thinkers and teachers
from all over Greece. The Ionian cosmologist Anaxagoras had admittedly
been run out of Athens for the crime of claiming that the sun was
a giant burning rock rather than a god; but Plato tells us that
Anaxagoras' treatise was nonetheless readily available in the public
marketplace for one drakhma per copy. Athenian playwrights like
Aristophanes mercilessly lampooned the political leaders of the
day, apparently with impunity. Philosophers freely taught courses,
and published tracts, on the evils of democracy. The orator Demosthenes
noted, in a remark later applied mutatis mutandis to the
United States and the Soviet Union, that the crucial difference
between Athens and Sparta was that one was free to praise the Spartan
constitution in Athens, but not vice versa.
The execution
of Sokrates, for undermining traditional values through his persistent
questioning, was an unspeakable crime, but we must remember that
someone like Sokrates would have been silenced much earlier in any
other Greek state; and even in Athens it took the intense paranoia
caused by a recent and bitter civil war to bring the lifelong gadfly
at last to trial (where he lost by a slim margin only 280
to 221 votes).
The Athenian
cultural scene was one of intense intellectual ferment, one that
laid the foundations for Western art, literature, and science for
the next two and a half millennia; and Athenian curiosity, and enthusiasm
for intellectual discussion and debate, were a byword. Even four
centuries later, the apostle Luke could still say, with a slight
sniff of disapproval, that the Athenians "spent their time in nothing
else, but either to tell, or to hear some new thing."
Nor was Athenian
freedom confined to the marketplace of ideas. A commercial empire,
Athens encouraged trade (unlike its rival, Sparta, where commerce
and even money were banned). Its economic policies would hardly
count as laissez-faire by libertarian standards, but they were liberal
enough to attract merchants from all over the Mediterranean world.
By Greek standards, Athens was a sparkling metropolis; the historian
Thucydides remarked caustically that future generations, seeing
the glorious ruins of majestic Athenian buildings, would overrate
Athens' importance (and underrate Sparta's, since the Spartans put
their money into instruments of conquest rather than into luxurious
living). Athenian Magistrates, upon entering office, had to take
a vow that no Athenian citizen's land would be confiscated or redistributed.
The Athenian
semi-free market unleashed an unprecedented flood of productive
energy that transformed Greek civilization. The Korinthians, allies
to Sparta and enemies of Athens, grumbled:
"An Athenian
is always an innovator, quick to form a resolution and quick at
carrying it out. ... if their enterprise is successful, they regard
that success as nothing compared to what they will do next. Suppose
they fail in some undertaking; they make good the loss immediately
by setting their hopes in some other direction. Of them alone it
may be said that they possess a thing almost as soon as they have
begun to desire it, so quickly with them does action follow upon
decision. ... seldom enjoying their possessions because they are
always adding to them. Their view of a holiday is to do what needs
doing; they prefer hardship and activity to peace and quiet. In
a word, they are by nature incapable of either living a quiet life
themselves or of allowing anyone else to do so."
(Thucydides,
I. 70.)
Above all, oppressive
oligarchies like Korinth and Sparta feared Athens' tendency to export
democratic ideals, awakening democratic and revolutionary aspirations
in the common people throughout Greece. When Perikles called Athens
"a school for all Greece," it may sound like idle patriotic piety
to us, but to Athens' oligarchic neighbors it meant something definite
and worrisome. The Athenian empire, which the oligarchs constantly
denounced as tyrannical, seems to have been in many ways a liberatory
force, and one welcomed by the democratic elements in the areas where
it held sway (cf. Forrest (1975)) which is not to say
that Athens never abused its imperial power!
We cannot forget,
of course, that the benefits of the Athenian constitution were restricted
to free adult males. Women and slaves were largely excluded. But
this flaw is one that Athens shared with its neighbors. That women
and slaves were oppressed in Athens is nothing remarkable; what
is remarkable is the amount of freedom available to Athenian males
who were not slaves.
How did Athens
achieve such a free and prosperous society? What system of government
made this possible? We call Athens a democracy, and think we know
what we mean. After all, we all live under the same system, don't
we?
But to the
Athenians, democracy (demo-kratia, "rule by the people")
meant something quite specific, and importantly different from the
political system of any nation today. Athenians would have guffawed
at the notion of calling the United States, for example, a democracy;
by their standards it would have been a moderate oligarchy. What,
then, was Athens' democratic constitution, and how can we learn
from it?
Origins
of the Athenian Constitution
To begin with,
Athens did not have a constitution in the sense of a written document.
Rather, to speak of the Athenian constitution is to speak of the
way the Athenian polity was constituted, i.e., what the structure
of the political system was. (This was the original meaning of "constitution"
in any case; only through etymological drift did a constitution
come to be thought of as a written blueprint for a political structure,
rather than as an instance of that structure.)
The Athenian
constitution originated in class warfare. The three basic socioeconomic
classes of Athenian society were the "Horsemen," the "Yokemen,"
and the "Menials." The Horsemen were the richest class; they got
their name, originally, from the fact that they could afford to
own horses. At one time the Horsemen had been the aristocratic class,
and Greek names with hippos, "horse," in them (e.g., Hippias,
Hipparchus, Pheidippides) continued to have an aristocratic flavor
to them, just as last names beginning with "Von" or "De" do today;
but as trade brought socioeconomic mobility, a fair number of nouveaux
riches found their way into the Horsemen class. (In early times
the top stratum of the Horsemen was distinguished as a separate
class, the "500-measure-men," based on the amount of grain their
estates could produce; but this distinction became lost as its political
significance faded, and I shall ignore it.) Composing the middle
class were the Yokemen, deriving their name from the fact that they
could afford a yoke of oxen. Unlike the independently wealthy Horsemen,
the Yokemen had to work for a living, usually as merchants or farmers;
the Greeks used oxen rather than horses for plowing, so horses were
a luxury in peacetime, while an ox paid for itself in farm work
and so was a more easily affordable possession. In the poorest class
were the Menials, those who worked for hire rather than being self-employed
like the Yokemen.
This socioecomonic
division translated, at least roughly, into a military division.
The Horsemen had horses, so they naturally supplied the ranks of
the cavalry. The Yokemen, of moderate means, could afford heavy
armor and weapons, and so made up the infantry. (In ancient times,
soldiers were generally expected to provide their own equipment.)
The Menials could not afford any military equipment, and so generally
served as rowers in the navy.
The three classes
contributed to the rise of the democracy in two ways. First, members
of the ruling class (the Horsemen) often found it useful to grant
political rights to the lower orders first to the Yokemen,
then eventually to the Menials in order to win popular support
in their intestine struggles for power with other members
of the ruling class. Kleisthenes, the traditional founder of the
Athenian democracy in 508, was simply the last in a long line of
glad-handing aristocrats doling out political largess to the masses
in exchange for their backing him against his aristocratic rivals;
he shot himself and his entire class in the foot by finally giving
the lower orders a few powers too many, thus making them rather
than the Horsemen the effective masters of the state and so changing
the rules of the game forever. (For a spirited analysis, see Forrest
(1975).) Second, because Athens was predominantly a naval power,
it depended more highly on its rowers than on its cavalry and infantry,
and this gave the Menials crucial leverage against the Horsemen
and Yokemen.
Thus, Athenian
democracy was born. But how did it work?
The Legislative
Branch
The Council
In the Athenian
state, as in any other, we can distinguish legislative, judicial,
and executive functions. The Athenian legislative branch consisted
of two bodies, a Council of 500 and an Assembly of 6000. At first
glance, this system resembles the American bicameral legislature,
with a small, select upper house and a larger, more popular lower
house. But this appearance is deceptive.
To begin with,
neither the Council nor the Assembly consisted of elected representatives.
The members of the Council were selected not by election but by
sortition i.e., by lot. In other words, the 500 Councillors
were selected randomly from the (male) citizen population.
(And no Councillor could serve more than two terms.)
The practice
of selecting government officials randomly (and the Athenians developed
some fairly sophisticated mechanical gadgets to ensure that the
selection really was random, and to make cheating extremely difficult)
is one of the most distinctive features of the Athenian constitution.
We think of electoral politics as the hallmark of democracy; but
elections were almost unknown at Athens, because they were considered
paradigmatically anti-democratic. Proposals to replace sortition
with election were always condemned as moves in the direction of
oligarchy.
Why? Well,
as the Athenians saw it, under an electoral system no one can obtain
political office unless he is already famous: this gives prominent
politicians an unfair advantage over the average person. Elections,
they thought, favor those wealthy enough to bribe the voters, powerful
enough to intimidate the voters, flashy enough to impress the voters,
or clever enough to deceive the voters. The most influential political
leaders were usually Horsemen anyway, thanks to their social prominence
and the political following they could obtain by dispensing largesse
among the masses. (One politician, Kimon, won the loyalty of the
poor by leaving his fields and orchards unfenced, inviting anyone
who was hungry to take whatever he needed.) If seats on the Council
had been filled by popular vote, the Horsemen would have disproportionately
dominated it just as, today, Congress is dominated by those
who can afford expensive campaigns, either through their own resources
or through wealthy cronies. Or, to take a similar example, in the
United States women have had the vote for over half a century, and
yet, despite being a majority of the population, they represent
only a tiny minority of elected officials. Obviously, the persistence
of male dominance in the economic and social sphere has translated
into women mostly voting for male candidates. The Athenians guessed,
probably rightly, that the analogous prestige of the upper classes
would lead to commoners mostly voting for aristocrats.
That is why
the Athenians saw elections as an oligarchical rather than a democratic
phenomenon. Above all, the Athenians feared the prospect of government
officials forming a privileged class with separate interests of
their own. Through reliance on sortition, random selection by lot,
the Council could be guaranteed to represent a fair cross-section
of the Athenian people a kind of proportional representation,
as it were. Random selection ensured that those selected would be
representatives of the people as a whole, whereas selection by vote
made those selected into mere representatives of the majority.
The Council's
duties were modest. It exercised some judicial and executive functions,
but its main job was to prepare business for the Assembly (which
met less often). The Council was convened by its President
a post that rotated among the membership. And I do mean rotated:
"every fourth adult male Athenian citizen could say, 'I have been
for twenty-four hours President of Athens' but no Athenian
citizen could ever boast of having been so for more than
twenty-four hours." (Hansen (1991), p. 314.)
The Assembly
Athenians did
not trust their representatives; they gave them as little power
as possible. While the Council was in charge of day-to-day business,
all really important issues were decided not by representatives
but by the people themselves (or as many as chose to show up) in
the Assembly, of which every adult male citizen was a member. The
Council could prepare legislation to be voted on in the Assembly,
but the Assembly was not bound by the Council's agenda.
The Athenians
would have agreed wholeheartedly with Karl Hess' critique of representative
democracy:
"In politics
a person is not a citizen if the person's only function is to vote.
Voters choose people who, in turn, act like citizens. They argue.
They establish the forms within which people live their lives. They
make politics. The people who merely vote for them merely make politicians.
People who argue for their positions in a town meeting are acting
like citizens. People who simply drop scraps of paper in a box or
pull a lever are not acting like citizens; they are acting like
consumers, picking between prepackaged political items. They had
nothing to do with the items. All they can do is pick what is. They
cannot actively participate in making what should be."
(Hess (1995),
p. 10.)
We should not
infer that everyone in the Assembly was equally active, however. As
in any group, there were some people who spoke all the time, some
who spoke once in a while, and some who never spoke but simply voted
yea or nay. Those who spoke all the time were called Rhetors, "speakers,"
and references to Athenian "politicians" or "political leaders" almost
always refer to this group of self-appointed leaders who generally
held no official position in the government. These Rhetors were prominent
citizens who had gained a popular following; they would rise in the
Assembly to propose a new statute or course of action, or to speak
for or against someone else's proposal. The job was not risk-free;
no one could be made to answer for how they had voted in the
Assembly, but politicians could be prosecuted for making an unconstitutional
proposal, or for deceiving the people with false promises. (Imagine
what our own political system would look like if politicians could
be prosecuted for false promises!)
The meeting
area for the Assembly seated 6000, whereas the number of those eligible
to attend has been estimated at anywhere from 20,000 to 60,000.
Obviously, not everyone could realistically hope to participate.
(If the Athenians were reinstituting their system today, they might
solve this problem through telecommunications technology and electronic
voting though they would have a healthy paranoia about the
dangers of electronic vote-tampering.) One had to arrive early to
be sure of a seat. But we should not picture the entire population
of Athens battering on the gates of the Assembly, trying to get
in and exercise their political rights. Athens was a large nation,
comprising not only the city of Athens proper but the entire plain
of Attika, and not all the citizens would have felt like trudging
all the way in from the countryside before dawn to vote on trade
agreements with some dinky island in the Aegean, or whatnot. (If
the issue concerned going to war with Sparta or something of that
sort, no doubt there was more interest.) In the early days of the
Assembly, often not enough people showed up, and guards had to be
sent to round up citizens in the marketplace in order to ensure
a quorum for the Assembly. After pay was instituted for participating
in the Assembly, this problem vanished! (Most state offices in Athens
came with a salary, so that less affluent citizens could afford
to participate without financial sacrifice; this was yet another
stratagem to prevent the rich from dominating the political process.)
It's unlikely, then, that very many citizens who strongly wanted
to participate in the Assembly were barred from doing so.
The ideological
complexion of the Assembly might vary somewhat from session to session,
depending on what else was going on. For example, Athens was a naval
power, and preferred to fight its battles at sea rather than on
land; during wartime, then, the fleet was more likely than the army
to be away, and so Menials would then be under-represented in the
Assembly in comparison with Horsemen and Yokemen. The absence of
the rowers could thus give the Assembly a temporary oligarchic bias.
Apart from the closing years of the Peloponnesian War, however,
this does not seem to have been a major problem.
In the fifth
century, the Assembly had complete power to pass or repeal legislation.
In the fourth century, however, it was decided (by the Assembly
itself) to limit this power in order to ensure greater constitutional
stability (something that had been sorely lacking during the crisis-fraught
closing years of the fifth century). A distinction was drawn between
two kinds of legislative acts: decrees, and laws proper. A law,
in the strict sense, had to be general in scope and open-ended in
duration; anything else was a decree. So, for example, "everyone
must wear polka dots from now on" would be a law, whereas "everyone
must wear polka dots for the next five weeks" and "Demosthenes must
wear polka dots from now on" would be decrees. In any conflict between
a law and a decree, the law was taken to have precedence, regardless
of which was passed first (just as, in the United States, constitutional
law always overrides statute law at least in theory!). The
Assembly retained the power to pass and repeal decrees, but in order
to make a change in the laws the Assembly now had to go through
the Legislative Courts (about which more below).
The Judicial
Branch
Arbitration
In Athens,
most disputes were settled through arbitration rather than in the
Jury Courts. There were two kinds of arbitration: public and private.
In private arbitration, the two parties to the dispute would select
a mutually agreeable third person or persons to decide the case;
the results of private arbitration were recognized in the law as
binding and final, and no appeal was permitted (unless malfeasance
could be shown on the part of the arbitrator). Alternatively, the
contending parties could bring their dispute to a state-appointed
public Arbitrator. (The board of public Arbitrators consisted of
all male citizens in their sixtieth year.) Because the disputants
had no choice about which Arbitrator was assigned to them, and might
end up with a dud, it was thought only fair in the case of public
arbitration (unlike private arbitration) to allow the Arbitrator's
decision to be appealed to the Jury Courts. The choice between private
arbitrators, public Arbitrators, and Jury Courts introduced a salutary
competitive element into the Athenian judicial system.
The Jury
Courts
The Jury Courts
were also staffed by sortition, picked daily from a pool of 6000
volunteers (a favorite number with the Athenians, apparently). Juries
were large, ranging from several hundred to several thousand depending
on the seriousness of the charge to be considered; typical numbers
were 401, 501, and 1001. The numbers were large in order to ensure
a representative sample of the Athenian population (arguably an
improvement over the current U. S. system), and uneven in order
to avoid ties (though sometimes they used even-numbered juries,
in which case a tie was interpreted as acquittal). Jurors were paid,
once again to ensure an adequate representation of the poor on juries.
There was no judge to restrict the jury's power. No Athenian juror
was ever subjected to compulsory empanelment, voir-dire, or sequestration,
nor was any Magistrate empowered to decide what evidence the jury
could or could not be allowed to see. Jurors, like voters in the
Assembly (and unlike Rhetors and Magistrates) were not accountable
for their decisions.
Potential jurors
swore the following oath: "I will cast my vote in accordance with
the laws and decrees passed by the Assembly and Council. On any
point where the law is silent I will give judgment in accordance
with my sense of what is most just, without favor or enmity. I will
vote only on the matters raised in the charge, and I will listen
impartially to accusers and defenders alike." However, jurors could
not be penalized for their vote unless it could be shown
that they had accepted bribes; but the practice of selecting juries
randomly on the morning of the trial made bribery difficult, and
the sheer size of juries limited the effectiveness of bribery in
any case.
Many ancient
observers considered that the Jury Courts, rather than the Council
or Assembly, were the true governing powers in Athens. For one thing,
the Jury Courts had the power of judicial review. The opportunity
to exercise this power came when a politicians was prosecuted for
having proposed an unconstitutional law or decree in the Assembly.
A politician could be prosecuted whether his proposal had passed
or not; but if it had indeed been enacted into law, and the proposer
was found guilty, the law was automatically repealed. The juries
made frequent use of this power: "The Supreme Court of the United
States has had the power to test and overthrow Congressional Acts
since 1803. In the period 18031986 that power was used 135
times: our sources show that at Athens that figure was nearly reached
in two decades, let alone two centuries." (Hansen (1991), p. 209.)
Thus, a few hundred ordinary citizens could strike down, as unconstitutional,
legislation enacted by an Assembly of 6000 people. The notion that
Athenian democracy meant the unrestrained tyranny of the majority
is clearly a myth. (The Athenian system also allowed for a second
kind of judicial review, to be discussed below.)
There were
no lawyers in an Athenian courtroom. The plaintiff and defendant
each had to conduct their own case, though they could hire someone
to help them write their courtroom speeches. (Only in rare cases
was a third party allowed to speak on a disputant's behalf.) Prosecutors
could be prosecuted for bringing a frivolous charge (defined as
one that could not win over even a substantial minority of the jurors).
There was also no distinction between crimes and torts; all trials
were treated as civil suits, with the victim (or, in murder cases,
the victim's family) rather than a public prosecutor directing the
prosecution's case. The closest equivalent to a crime/tort distinction
was that between private prosecutions, where the aggrieved party
was an individual citizen, and public prosecutions, where the aggrieved
party was the city as a whole. Even in the latter case, though,
the charge had to be initiated and argued by a private citizen on
behalf of the city, so it was really more like what we would call
a class-action suit.
Trials were
swift, lasting no longer than a day. (Trials today can be criticized
for excessive length, but to my mind the Athenian alternative goes
too far in the opposite direction as in fact Sokrates complained
at his trial.) If the jury found the defendant guilty, the next
phase of the trial concerned sentencing. Some crimes had penalties
predetermined by law, but in most cases the choice was left up to
the jury, thus avoiding the modern problem of having jury verdicts
unduly influenced by the jury's expectation of the likely severity
of the penalty.
The procedure
worked as follows: The prosecutor would propose a penalty, and the
defendant would then respond with a counter-proposal, obviously
of a lighter penalty. The jury would then choose between the two
penalties. (Having the jury come up with a penalty of its own would
have required discussion and debate impracticable under the circumstances,
given the size of the jury.) Prosecutors were prevented from proposing
excessively harsh penalties by the fear that this would make the
jury more likely to choose the defendant's milder proposal; defendants
were likewise prevented from proposing excessively mild penalties
by the fear that this would make the jury more likely to choose
the prosecutor's harsher proposal. This was an ingenious way of
ensuring moderation in punishments. (Giving juries the power to
decide both verdict and sentence also avoided the modern problem
of sentences that defy the jury's intentions, as in the recent case
of the jurors who found the survivors of the Waco massacre not guilty
of all but a handful of minor counts, only to learn with dismay
that those few counts would send the Branch Davidians to prison
for many years.)
The most common
penalty was a fine. (In addition, the loser paid the winner's court
costs.) The severest penalties were enslavement and capital punishment
(the latter being inflicted in a number of ways ranging from poison
to crucifixion). Intermediate penalties were exile and "dishonor."
"Dishonor" is sometimes described by modern scholars as loss of
citizenship, but it was actually much more severe; it meant exclusion
from the political, economic, and religious life of Athenian society:
dishonored citizens, unlike exiles, were allowed to continue residing
in the city, but could not vote, hold office, serve on juries, set
foot in the marketplace, or bring a case before a courtroom. (This
last prohibition meant they were effectively outside the protection
of the laws.) Imprisonment was unknown as a penalty. Athenian prisons
were only temporary holding cells; thus Athens was spared the staggering
expense of housing and feeding criminals for years on end. Any criminal
too dangerous to be allowed on the streets was either executed or
exiled.
Libertarians
today are conflicted on the issue of jury rights. On the one hand,
libertarians generally favor the jury's right to nullify laws, as
a check on legislative abuse of power. On the other hand, many libertarians
of late have jumped on the conservative bandwagon of imposing limits
on the amount of money juries can award in a civil suit. I myself
referred to excessive jury awards as a "pressing problem" at the
first FNF Forum:
"In recent
years, absurdly high awards for damages have demonstrated the risks
of a jury system, and the attractions of adjudication by experts.
Yet juries remain an essential bulwark against state tyranny, a
role government-approved experts are ill-suited to play. Competition
among judicial systems would allow whichever mix of trial-by-jury
and trial-by-experts best satisfied the needs of the public."
("The Rationale
of a Virtual-Canton Constitution," Proceedings of a Forum on
the Subject of Constitutions, Autumn 1993.)
I still endorse
the point about the value of competition, but over the past few years
I have become convinced that the excessive-damages issue has been
overstated. The notorious examples of abuse appear to be exceptional,
and even many of those do not stand up to close scrutiny. (For example,
everyone knows about the woman who sued McDonalds because she spilled
some coffee and burned herself; but how many know that McDonalds had
received and ignored thousands of complaints about unusually hot coffee
(185°, enough to cause serious damage at even a second's exposure)
prior to her case, or that her coffee was so hot that it burned through
three layers of skin, so that the woman required skin grafts and remains
permanently disfigured in the genital area?) In many cases, the "excessive
awards" are swallowed up by the government, and the victim never sees
a penny of it. Placing a cap on awards because of a handful of abuses
seems like exactly the sort of favoritism toward the rich that the
Athenians were above all concerned to prevent. I admit to some nervousness
about this conclusion, in the light of such recent anti-libertarian
trends as cigarette smokers suing tobacco companies and gunshot victims
suing arms manufacturers; but I would prefer to address this problem
through legislation defining product liability so as to exclude liability
for defects that are common knowledge (e.g., the addictive and carcinogenic
properties of tobacco) or for "defects" inherent in the proper as-advertised
good working order of the product (e.g., the fact that you can injure
or kill people by shooting a gun at them), rather than through putting
caps on jury awards.
The rule of
evidence is a particularly delicate issue for libertarians. On the
one hand, the idea of a dangerous criminal getting off on a technicality
is distasteful. On the other hand, giving law enforcement officials
carte blanche to violate the law goes against everything we stand
for. Yet the judge's power to rule on the admissibility of evidence
is being increasingly abused, and may be a luxury we can no longer
afford. Two recent examples of this:
1) During
the O. J. Simpson trial, the jury was allowed to learn that the
police detective who found the main evidence against Simpson had
lied about using racial epithets but they were not allowed
to learn that he was a virulent racist who had bragged on tape about
planting evidence and beating up minorities. I did not follow the
Simpson case closely enough to have any opinion as to what verdict
the jury should have reached (I may be the only person in America
without such an opinion!), but it seems to me that when the main
evidence against a black defendant depends on the testimony of a
man who says all blacks should be killed, and who admits having
planted evidence in the past, that is clearly relevant to
the defense's case, and something the jury ought to be told
but the judge decided to exclude the tape.
2) Several
years ago in Massachusetts a Christian Science family was prosecuted
for having relied on Christian Science treatment rather than medical
care for an ill child who subsequently died. That sort of case
raises complicated legal, moral, scientific, and religious issues
which I won't address now. What concerns me at present is the
fact that there was a Massachusetts statute on the books which
specifically exempted Christian Scientists from the requirement
that parents provide their children with medical care, and the
jury was not allowed to know about that statute; the judge refused
to permit the defense lawyers to inform the jury about it. (Testimony
defending the reliability of Christian Science healing was also
excluded.) The jurors were "instructed" that they had to find
the defendants guilty, and they did so, tearfully and reluctantly;
they were furious afterward, when they learned the truth. When
the law itself can be excluded as inadmissible evidence,
clearly the judge's power to exclude evidence has gone too far.
To my mind, the
most attractive solution to the problem of admissibility is one suggested
by Eric Klien and Mike Oliver in the Constitution of Oceania:
"The jury
may not at any time be removed from the courtroom during a trial
to prevent them from hearing evidence. ... The judge has no power
to strike any evidence from the record. It is expected that juries
are reasoning Adults who are as competent as the judge to decide
who is lying and who is not. Evidence uncovered by an illegal search
WILL be allowed in Court. Unlike corrupt countries that allow both
the criminal and the arresting officer to go free when an illegal
search is made, Oceania will prosecute both."
This is very much
in the spirit of the Athenian jury system.
The Athenians
would have been horrified at the extent to which our government
today has encroached upon the jury's authority with voir-dire, rules
of evidence, and the like. The 19th-century libertarian theorist
Lysander Spooner, a hero of today's jury-rights movement, in his
famous Essay on the Trial by Jury defended the idea of jury
sovereignty in terms quite similar to the thinking of the Athenian
democrats:
"To secure
this right of the people to judge of their own liberties against
the government, the jurors are taken ... from the body of the people,
by lot, or by some process that precludes any previous knowledge,
choice, or selection of them, on the part of the government.
This is done
to prevent the government's constituting a jury of its own partisans
and friends; in other words, to prevent the government's packing
a jury, with a view to maintain its own laws, and accomplish
its own purposes.
It is supposed
that, if twelve men be taken, by lot, from the mass of
the people, without the possibility of any previous knowledge,
choice, or selection of them, on the part of the government, the
jury will be a fair epitome of 'the country' at large, and not
merely of the party or faction that sustain the measures of the
government; that substantially all classes of opinions, prevailing
among the people, will be represented in the jury; and especially
that the opponents of the government ... will be represented there,
as well as its friends .... A trial by such a tribunal is, therefore,
in effect, 'a trial by the country.' ...
But all this
'trial by the country' would be no trial at all 'by the country,'
but only a trial by the government, if the government could either
declare who may, and who may not, be jurors, or could dictate
to the jury anything whatever, either of law or evidence, that
is of the essence of the trial.
If the government
may decide who may, and who may not, be jurors, it will of course
select only its partisans, and those friendly to its measures."
(Spooner,
pp. 122-123.)
(And of course
Spooner's argument for selecting jurors by lot applies mutatis
mutandis to the selection of legislators.)
The Athenian
court system did not operate according to precedent. No jury was
bound by the decisions of previous juries in previous cases. This
is a striking difference between Athenian law and more familiar
systems like Roman law or the English common law. Whether this was
a good or bad thing is hard to say. On the down side, the refusal
to rely on precedents deprived the Athenian legal process of the
valuable attribute of predictability. Reduction of uncertainty is
ordinarily a virtue in any legal system. Moreover, case law, evolving
in response to the needs of day-to-day life, can serve as a useful
check against an arrogant and unrestrained legislature; and case
law can also serve as a storehouse for the accumulated wisdom of
many generations of judges. On the positive side, the jury's freedom
to decide cases according to their common sense rather than adhere
to judicial precedent ensured that people would be judged according
to the well-understood and widely-accepted customs and moral sense
of the average citizen, rather than according to the arcane criteria
of a jurisprudential elite. (My impression is that case law is preferable
so long as it retains a strong competitive element, and becomes
a maze of impenetrable jargon only when that element is removed.)
The Areopagos
The Jury Courts
formed the core of Athens' judicial branch; but another court, the
Areopagos, was also highly respected. The Areopagos, so called because
it met on the Hill of Ares, was a survival from an earlier period;
before the establishment of democracy, the Areopagos had been the
old aristocratic senate, the most powerful body in Athens. Democratic
reforms transferred most of the Areopagos' powers to the Council
or the Assembly, transforming the Areopagos into a court with fairly
limited jurisdiction (whose extent appears to have fluctuated over
the years).
These reforms
also changed the Areopagos' composition from a body of hereditary
nobles to a board consisting of former Magistrates. The Areopagites
held office for life, an extremely unusual provision by Athenian
standards but since the Areopagites were drawn from the Magistrates,
who in turn were chosen by lot, the Areopagos, like the Jury Courts,
could be expected to represent a fair cross-section of the Athenian
population, while the fact that all Areopagites had served as Magistrates
guaranteed that they would have more political experience than the
average jury. The Areopagos seems to have enjoyed a kind of mystique,
and its decisions were highly respected.
During the
Roman period, after Athens had ceased to be a democracy, the Areopagos
recovered many of its old aristocratic powers, and became once more
the supreme power in Athens. That is why, in the first century AD,
the apostle Paul was brought before the Areopagos ("Mars' hill"),
rather than the Council or Assembly, to explain his doctrine. (Acts
17: 15-23.)
The Legislative
Courts
At the beginning
of the fourth century, after a decade of unprecedented constitutional
crisis, the Athenians decided to add a stabilizing factor: the Legislative
Courts. Each year, the Assembly conducted a review of all the existing
laws (in the narrow sense, excluding decrees), voting each one up
or down. If a law was approved, it was retained without change.
But if it was disapproved, the Assembly could not simply abolish
it as they could with decrees; the Athenians did not want to run
the risk that the Assembly might be pressured or intimidated into
abolishing Athens' democratic institutions, as they had in 411.
If the Assembly wanted a law revised or repealed, they had to convene
a Legislative Court.
Cases before
the Legislative Courts were conducted like regular jury trials,
except that it was the law, rather than an individual, that stood
accused. Those favoring repeal acted as prosecutors, those opposing
repeal argued the defense. Instead of choosing between penalty and
counter-penalty, the jurors (called "Legislators," but drawn by
lot from the same pool of volunteers as the ordinary Jury Courts)
chose between the existing law and the proposed revision. The Legislative
Courts thus acted as a second forum for judicial review.
The Executive
Branch
The Magistrates
The remainder
of government business was conducted by a host of commissioners,
functionaries, and minor officials, known collectively as the Magistrates.
These too were generally chosen by lot, and restricted to a one-year
term; an important exception was the Board of Generals, who were
elected by popular vote (this was one office the Athenians could
not afford to fill with inexperienced people chosen at random) and
could be re-elected indefinitely (term limits for a successful General
in the middle of a war didn't make sense).
Contemporary
critics regarded the practice of appointing Magistrates by lot as
sheer lunacy. Most of these critics were oligarchs who shuddered
at the thought of offices being filled from the ranks of the rabble,
but at least one critic, the anonymous author of the fourth-century
treatise Dissoi Logoi, attacked sortition on democratic grounds:
Since oligarchs are a minority of the population, elections will
keep them out of office, whereas sortition could easily place such
people in positions of power, thus imperilling the city's democratic
institutions. Most Athenians, however, were inclined to view elections
as more likely than sortition to bring oligarchs to power,
given the influence that wealth can have on elections.
In any case,
there were safeguards against the danger that the lot would bring
too many knaves and fools to power:
"It was not
'the rulers of the city' who were chosen by lot, but officials charged
with limited routine duties, for which little more than 'a sense
of decency and fair play' was required. Furthermore, it must be
remembered that a magistrate had to pass a preliminary examination,
which was, it is true, usually formal, but gave his enemies an opportunity
for raking up his past; was liable to be deposed by a vote of the
assembly taken ten times a year; and after his year was subject
to a scrutiny in which his accounts were audited and any citizen
could charge him with inefficiency or abuse of authority."
(Jones (1957),
p. 48.)
Law Enforcement
Law enforcement
was not one of the services offered by the Athenian state. Athens
had no actual police force; the nearest equivalent was a few hundred
guards slaves owned by the state but their main task
was keeping order at public meetings. The notion of an elite enforcement
corps, with broader authority than the average citizen, would have
been anathema to the Athenians. "No classical state ever established
a sufficient governmental machinery by which to secure the appearance
of a defendant in court or the execution of a judgment in private
suits. Reliance on self-help was therefore compulsory ...." (Finley
(1994), p. 107.) Victims had to rely on friends and relatives to
enforce judicial decisions; if these lacked sufficient force, it
might be necessary to appeal to a powerful patron, though the role
of patronage in law enforcement never reached the level of formalization
that we find in, for example, mediæval Iceland. (Still, in
light of this recourse to private law enforcement, it's debatable
whether Athens really counts as a state.)
Ostracism
The Athenians
did not take their democracy for granted. They were all too conscious
of the exceptional and fragile nature of their political system,
and they built in as many safeguards as they could devise against
the growth of an oligarchic elite. This fear was not idle; they
saw that those few political leaders who were not appointed by lot
the Generals and the Rhetors came overwhelmingly from
the wealthier classes. Clearly, social prominence and economic patronage,
combined with the eloquence and persuasiveness available to those
who could afford to pay teachers of rhetoric, could provide a path
to political power for the rich. The Athenians knew the early history
of their city, when tyrants won power by posing as champions of
the people, and they were determined not to let it happen again.
One of the
safeguards they adopted was formal ostracism. This allowed the Athenian
people as a whole to vote for the expulsion from the city of any
citizen they chose, for a period of ten years. Unlike exile, ostracism
was not a penalty for a crime; also unlike exile, it was applied
only to the prominent and powerful those that the people
feared might be positioning themselves for a coup. The procedure
was that someone would propose to hold an ostracism, the Assembly
would vote on it, and if the proposal won then an ostracism would
be scheduled. On the day of the ostracism, every adult male citizen
could turn in a ticket (literally a potsherd, ostrakon, whence
the name) inscribed with the name of the person they thought Athens
could best do without, and the person whose name got the most votes
had to leave the city for ten years.
A famous anecdote
about the Athenian statesman Aristeides, popularly known as "Aristeides
the Just," is that one day when Athens was holding an ostracism,
an illiterate farmer came up to him, not knowing who he was, and
asked him for help in inscribing his ostracism ticket. Aristeides
agreed to help, and asked whose name the farmer wanted to inscribe.
"Aristeides!" the farmer said. When asked what he had against Aristeides,
the farmer replied that he was sick of hearing Aristeides called
"Aristeides the Just" all the time. So Aristeides duly inscribed
his own name on the ticket, and in fact was ostracized. (It would
be particularly poignant if his ostracism had carried by one vote,
but it seems not. The whole story is usually assumed to be apocryphal;
however, Hansen points out: "oddly enough, there does survive one
ostrakon on which the name Aristeides was started in a shaky
hand and crossed out and begun again in a firm, legible one." (Hansen
(1991), p. 312.))
This anecdote
is often appealed to (e.g., by Isabel Paterson) as evidence that
people were ostracized for frivolous reasons; but I think this fails
to see the farmer's point. The farmer was not simply being cantankerous,
envious, or malicious; when a prominent politician gets a name like
"the Just" or "the Great" popularly attached to his name, thus being
treated with the kind of reverence and deference more appropriate
to a king than to a fellow-citizen, from the Athenian point of view
this is a danger sign that the individual is getting too powerful
and poses a danger to his nation's freedom. The formal ostracism
was a kind of pre-emptive strike.
Ostracism was
fairly common in the fifth century, but seems to have been abandoned
in the fourth, when prosecution for unconstitutional proposals became
the more common way of curbing the power of politicians. This is
arguably preferable, in fact, since it requires charging the accused
person with a definite infraction and proving him guilty, and so
seems less arbitrary and more in accordance with the traditional
Athenian respect for the rule of law.
Athenian
Democracy and Its Critics
Ancient
Critics
Not all Athenians
had a high opinion of their constitution. Thucydides, for example,
blamed the loss of the Athenian Empire on incompetent leadership,
entering the Peloponnesian War rashly and then waging it in an erratic
and irresponsible fashion. This in turn he thought was the inevitable
result of allowing the ignorant masses to outvote the educated and
respectable citizens. For a long time modern historians accepted
this judgment, blaming Athenian democracy both for starting the
war and for losing it. But recent historical research has shown
that these charges are largely unfounded; I won't take the space
to go into details here, but check the bibliography entries for
Forrest and Kagan. Recall, too, that if it was under democracy that
the Athenians lost their empire, it was also under democracy that
they won it not once but twice.
Another common
charge in antiquity found in Plato's Republic, for
example was that democracy leads to tyranny. All Greeks knew
of examples where ambitious men had won dictatorial powers by posing
as champions of the poor. The opponents of democracy reasoned that
this should be all the more easy in democratic states, because the
poor the natural supporters of such a champion have
more clout and so can bring their champion to power more easily.
But a study
of history does not seem to bear this theory out. It is certainly
true that in non-democratic societies, unscrupulous politicians
have often exploited democratic aspirations on the part of the poor
in order to gain power for themselves; think of Julius Cæsar,
or in more recent times Juan Perón. But this is far less
common in a genuine democracy, precisely because the poor have access
to established constitutional means for redressing their grievances
and so have less need of such a champion. And the two brief coups
that occurred in the history of the Athenian democracy were both
carried off by avowed oligarchs who made no pretense of democratic
sympathies.
One charge
brought by some of the more extreme critics of Athenian democracy,
like Plato in the Republic, or the anonymous author called
the "Old Oligarch," was that under democracy there was too much
freedom. People made their own choices and lived as they pleased,
without being directed and supervised by the state; and they showed
insufficient deference to their social superiors. Of course, the
fact that Athenian democracy attracted this sort of comment is precisely
why libertarians should take it seriously as a model!
Critics of
democracy regarded politics as the rightful domain of an educated
elite, a domain in which the lower orders had no business meddling.
Indeed, "minding one's own business" became an oligarchic code phrase
for depriving the lower class of political rights, prompting Perikles
to snap in response:
"Here [in
Athens] each individual is interested not only in his own affairs
but in the affairs of the state as well: even those who are mostly
occupied with their own business are extremely well-informed on
general politics this is a peculiarity of ours: we do not
say that a man who takes no interest in politics is a man who minds
his own business; we say that he has no business here at all."
(Thucydides,
II. 40.)
This retort has
sometimes been misread as an endorsement of collectivism and compulsory
political participation; in fact it is simply a rejection of the notion
that slavish deference to one's class superiors is an appropriate
attitude for a free citizen.
Plato's main
criticism of the Athenian system was that, in politics as in every
other field of endeavor, decisions should be made by experts rather
than by voting. We do not decide how to treat a disease, or build
a house, or solve a mathematical problem, by putting the matter
to a vote or picking people at random; instead we appeal to those
who have knowledge, and accept their decision, ignoring everybody
else's. Why, he asked, should we not behave likewise in politics,
giving supreme power to a handful of experts while denying any voice
in the matter to the ignorant masses?
The obvious
response, of course, is to ask, first, how these experts are to
be recognized and identified, and second, even if their expertise
is genuine, how they are to be trusted to rule in the common interest
rather than exclusively in their own. Athenians had a skeptical
attitude toward professional politicians:
"They went
on the basis that, given the chance, every one of them would have
his hand in the till and make a profit out of political activity,
and they took every possible means to limit the chances. ... Athenian
leaders were called to account more than any other such group in
history: to be a rhetor or a general was to choose a perilous
career that could easily lead to condemnation and execution
if you failed to flee into exile in time."
(Hansen (1991),
p. 310.)
Plato has Sokrates
remark in his defense speech that if he had been a politician rather
than a philosopher he would have been executed a lot earlier, since
no Athenian politician who opposes the will of the people can expect
to escape with his life. (Plato means this as a complaint against
Athens; from our perspective it may look more like praise.)
Plato would
have agreed that politicians are generally untrustworthy, but he
would have blamed this on the fact that they had been improperly
brought up. This was another quarrel that Plato and other critics
had with democracy: the absence of public education. The teaching
of children was left up to their parents to arrange; Plato was convinced
that if this power were taken away from the arbitrary and ill-informed
decisions of parents and transferred instead to the state, so that
future leaders could be subjected from birth to a rigorous program
of moral training and indoctrination, the problem of untrustworthy
politicians would be solved.
Plato seems
to have seen few limits to the capacity of human nature to be shaped
and molded. Not all of his students agreed. Aristotle, for example,
though also an advocate of public education, favored a narrower
scope for it than Plato had, and made more modest claims on its
behalf. To justify his skepticism Aristotle pointed to the example
of Sparta, on whose education system Plato's was largely modeled;
the Spartans, he noted, behaved with inflexible virtue and iron
discipline when they were being observed by their peers, but once
they traveled outside of Sparta they were notorious for being the
most corrupt crooks in Greece.
Most critics
of democracy were less extreme than Plato. They did not generally
advocate giving absolute power to an elite and disenfranchising
the common people utterly. Instead, they advocated a system which
has come to be known as a constitutional republic. Even Plato
eventually came around, in his later years, to this model.
The function
of a constitutional republic is to balance the interests of the
wealthy minority against the interests of the less affluent majority,
so that neither side can run roughshod over the other's rights.
Xenophon, for example, argued that since it is agreed that it is
wrong for the rich to oppress the poor, it should also be agreed
that it is wrong for the poor to oppress the rich. Aristotle made
the same point from the opposite angle: since it is agreed that
it is wrong for the poor to oppress the rich, it should also be
agreed that it is wrong for the rich to oppress the poor. (Perhaps
they were addressing different audiences?) In addition to being
more just, such a system was also likely to be more stable, since
the interests of the two classes most able to overthrow the constitution
(the rich, powerful because of their wealth, and the poor, powerful
because of their numbers) would both be addressed.
How would such
a constitutional republic be structured? There were different proposals,
but many of the moderate critics of democracy converged on a model
called the Mixed Constitution. (Some Athenians called it the "ancestral
constitution," on the basis of a certain similarity to the precepts
of the early Athenian lawgiver Solon.) Thucydides and Aristotle
favored this system, for example, as did such later Aristoteleans
as the historian Polybius, who looked to the Roman Republic as a
successful example; and the Mixed Constitution has continued to
cast its spell well into the modern era, influencing such figures
as Machiavelli, Montesquieu, and Madison.
The idea behind
the Mixed Constitution was to combine elements of democracy with
elements of oligarchy, the theory being that this was the best way
to achieve the goal of balancing the interests of the many against
the interests of the few. Different versions of the Mixed Constitution
were proposed, but the following four points are fairly representative:
1. Abolish
sortition in favor of election by vote.
As we've seen,
election was regarded as a move away from genuine democracy because
it favored the wealthy and prominent over the average citizen. The
moderates condemned selection by lot as foolish, since it gave more
qualified candidates no advantage over less qualified ones, and
they hoped that an electoral system would bring a "better class
of people" into office.
2. Abolish
pay for government officials and jurors.
Advocates of
the Mixed Constitution saw government salaries as favoring the poor
over the rich and the middle class, since poor people would be disproportionately
attracted to them especially the very poorest, the marginal,
unemployable, disreputable "rabble."
3. Deprive
the Menial class of all political rights.
This is in
the same spirit as point 2. The theory was that political sense
and political virtue were the product of education and experience,
and so required leisure. Those who engaged in manual labor did not
have the time to develop the political skills necessary for an informed
vote. In addition, servile laborers i.e., those who worked
for hire rather than being self-employed were regarded as
being dependent on their employers and thus too analogous to slaves
to qualify as complete citizens. Finally, it was thought that the
poverty of the Menials made them potential traitors to the regime,
since it would be easier to bribe them; the city would be more stable
if political rights were reserved to those who had a financial stake,
a kind of investment, in the preservation of the constitution.
4. Give
both the Horsemen and the Yokemen the right to vote, but ensure
that only Horsemen hold office.
There were
two possible ways of doing this. The most obvious would be to simply
exclude Yokemen from office by legal fiat. A subtler way would be
to rely on step 1, using the social prominence and economic patronage
of the Horsemen to guarantee that offices would nearly always go
to them anyway, even if Yokemen remained technically eligible as
well.
The reason
for reserving governmental offices for the Horsemen class was the
usual one that political wisdom requires education, which requires
leisure, which requires wealth. Why, then, allow Yokemen the vote?
Why not let the Horsemen monopolize all political rights? Because
the Mixed Constitution is intended to be a combination of oligarchy
and democracy, not a pure triumph for oligarchy. To exclude the
respectable middle class the Yokemen from all political
rights would be unjust, as well as threatening the stability of
the regime by giving the armed infantry (drawn predominantly from
the Yokemen) an incentive to rebel.
In addition,
Aristotle advanced a subtler reason for not disenfranchising the
Yokemen. He agreed that the more prosperous citizens were likely
to be wiser; but, unlike Plato, he thought that a large number of
individually unimpressive people might, by pooling their collective
experience, turn out to be wiser than a single wise individual.
(A modern confirmation of this is that, e.g., if people who have
no idea how tall Mount Everest is are nevertheless asked to guess,
any individual guess is likely to be wildly wrong, but as the sample
increases, the average of all the guesses converges with astonishing
accuracy on the correct figure.)
How well founded
were these four proposals? Not very. If sortition brought such useless
people to power, how was Athens able to dominate Greece? Complaints
about the inefficiency of the lot seem to be rather exaggerated.
And many of these complaints missed the point anyway:
"... how
absurd it is, says Sokrates, to pick the magistrates by lot when
you would not pick a helmsman, or whatever, in that way. [Sokrates'
fallacy] resides in the unstated premise that the magistrates have
the same power to steer the ship of state as a helmsman has to steer
his ship. But the Athenians chose their magistrates by lot precisely
to ensure that they should not be steersmen of the state:
one of the purposes of the lot was to diminish the powers of the
magistrates. The lot was based on the idea not that all men were
equally expert, but that all men were expert enough at what they
were chosen for, and that by the use of the lot magistracies would
cease to be attractive as weapons in the struggle for power."
(Hansen (1991),
p. 236.)
Nor is there any
evidence to suppose that the poor were over-represented in political
offices or on juries. Jurors in particular were drawn largely from
older, retired citizens, who had the necessary leisure to serve all
day as jurors, and many were drawn to the job for its psychic rewards
put bluntly, an opportunity to wield power rather than
for the modest wages. As for the proposal to exclude the poorer classes
from some or all political rights, the notion that wisdom and virtue
are correlated with wealth and education is a dubious one that history
does not seem to support; and Aristotle's suggestion that manual laborers
are on a par with mental defectives is such an obvious product of
class bias that it is difficult to take seriously. Moreover, the idea
that the poor are the most likely to turn traitor is particularly
ludicrous, given that Athens' most famous traitors men like
Alcibiades and Hippias came from the aristocratic class. Indeed,
one could argue that the poor were the class least likely to
be tempted to betray their country, as they had the most to lose if
the democratic constitution were overturned.
These theorists
were right to favor the notion of a constitutional republic, where
neither the rich minority nor the poor majority could gain the upper
hand and play the role of tyrant. Their mistake lay in thinking
that the Mixed Constitution, a combination of democracy and oligarchy,
was the best way to implement the republican ideal. On the contrary,
the Athenian democracy was a constitutional republic already.
Thucydides has one spokesman for democracy, a Sicilian Rhetor with
the suspiciously apposite democratic name of Athenagoras, point
out that demokratia rule by the people means
empowering the people as a whole, not just the majority:
"There are
people who will say that democracy is neither an intelligent nor
a fair system, and that those who have the money are also the best
rulers. But I say, first, that what is meant by the demos,
or people, is the whole State, whereas an oligarchy is only a section
of the State; and I say next that though the rich are the best people
for looking after money, the best counselors are the intelligent,
and that it is the many who are best at listening to the different
arguments and judging between them. And all alike, whether taken
all together or as separate classes, have equal rights in a democracy."
(Thucydides,
VI. 39.)
The Athenian playwright
Euripides likewise describes the democratic ideal not as domination
by the majority but as equality before the law:
"Your start
was wrong, seeking a master here.
This city is free, and ruled by no one man.
The people reign, in annual succession.
They do not yield the power to the rich;
The poor man has an equal share in it. ...
People of small resources and the rich
Both have the same recourse to justice. Now
A man of means, if badly spoken of,
Will have no better standing than the weak;
And if the little man is right, he wins
Against the great. This is the call of freedom:
'What man has good advice to give the city,
And wishes to make it known?' He who responds
Gains glory; the reluctant hold their peace.
For the city, what can be more fair than that? ...
But when one man is king, he finds this hateful,
And if he thinks that any of the nobles
Are wise, he fears for his despotic power
And kills them. How can a city become strong
If someone takes away, cuts off new ventures
Like ears of corn in a spring field? What use
To build a fortune, if your work promotes
The despot's welfare, not your family's?"
(Euripides,
The
Suppliant Women 404451.)
The advocates
of the Mixed Constitution, on the other hand, saw democracy as rule
by the poor majority. Since they knew that oligarchy was rule by the
rich minority, it was not unnatural for them to conclude that the
best way to balance the interests of both factions was to design the
constitution so as to embody a mixture of democratic and oligarchic
elements. Their error lay in seeing a symmetry between democracy and
oligarchy that did not exist.
Why was this
an error? Because severing the official link between wealth
and political power did not deprive the wealthy of all their power,
but only of some of it. The riches of the upper class still provided
them with a great deal of influence, even under democracy. As I
have argued elsewhere:
"The city-states
of the ancient world ... had surprisingly weak and decentralized
governments, with nothing we would recognize as a police force.
... Yet these city-states were class societies, with a powerful
and effective ruling class. Where did the power of the ruling class
come from, if not from a powerful state?
The historian
M. I. Finley has studied this question, and come to the conclusion
that the ruling classes maintained their power through the device
of patronage .... In effect, the wealthy classes kept control
by buying off the poor. Each wealthy family had a large following
of commoners who served their patrons' interests (e.g.,
supporting aristocratic policies in the public assembly) in exchange
for the family's largess."
("Can We
Escape the Ruling Class?," in Formulations, Vol. II, No.
1 (Autumn 1994); cf. Finley (1994).)
The Athenian democrats
were well aware of the dangers from patronage. They could have attempted
to meet this problem by simply abolishing inequalities of wealth and
redistributing the oligarchs' riches to the masses. Indeed, the upper
class was fond of accusing the democrats of planning to do this. But
in fact the Athenian democrats were far too committed to the ideals
of individual rights and the rule of law to contemplate such a measure.
Rather than eliminating economic inequality itself, they sought to
combat its effects. That is why they relied on sortition rather
than election so that the rich could not use patronage to buy
their way into office. Likewise, all the Athenian experiments (mild
by today's standards) with welfare statism were attempts to fight
patronage by providing the poor with a source of revenue that would
not make them dependent on their class opponents.
Athens' democratic
institutions weakened the effects of patronage, and so largely prevented
the rich from oppressing the poor. But they did not do away with
the effects of patronage entirely, and so the poor were not thereby
empowered to oppress the rich. The result was a balance between
the interests of the two classes, just as the advocates of the Mixed
Constitution recommended. Those advocates did not recognize Athens
as an instance of their ideal of a constitutional republic, because
they did not sufficiently appreciate the power of patronage. Their
favored remedy, the Mixed Constitution, tilts the scales of power
decisively in favor of the rich once the power of patronage is taken
into account the Roman Republic being an obvious case in
point.2 Because they underestimated the political
clout that wealth brings, their recommended system of checks and
balances overcompensates for the power of the poor and undercompensates
for the power of the rich.
Modern Critics
Athens has
its modern critics also. One common criticism of the Athenian system
of direct democracy is that such a high level of participation requires
a great deal of leisure, and that the citizens enjoyed this leisure
only because they could rely on the unpaid labor of women and slaves.
Thus, it is claimed, the Athenian political system inherently requires
involuntary servitude as its economic base. By contrast, in a representative
system, the level of participation demanded is lower, and so citizens
do not have to spend all their time discussing politics; they can
work for a living, and so do not have to depend on exploiting the
labor of a large class without political rights.
I think this
objection is mistaken. It is certainly true that in Athens, as in
other Greek states, women and slaves were excluded from the benefits
of democratic rights. But this was not essential to the system.
The amount of leisure that the Athenian system required has been
grossly exaggerated. Most Athenians worked for a living. The heaviest
labor was performed not only by slaves but also by Menials, who
were generally too poor to own slaves; to the Menials, the notion
of Athenians as a bunch of leisured gentlemen relying on the labor
of slaves would have seemed a bad joke. The Yokemen did ordinarily
have slaves, but they themselves worked too, as farmers or tradesmen,
often right alongside their slaves. The only class of which the
"leisure" stereotype is at all true is the Horsemen, and they were
a minority of the Athenian population. There was no significant
conflict between political participation and earning a living. Serving
as a Councillor or Magistrate was a temporary position; the Assembly
met infrequently, and most people attended only occasionally anyway;
and the judiciary was manned primarily by retirees. So the Athenian
system would not have been noticeably hampered if slavery and sexual
inequality had been banished.
One prominent
modern critic (modern in the sense of post-Renaissance) of Athenian
democracy was James Madison, father of the U. S. Constitution. In
the Federalist Papers, he wrote:
"... a pure
democracy, by which I mean a society consisting of a small number
of citizens, who assemble and administer the government in person,
can admit of no cure for the mischiefs of faction. A common passion
or interest will, in almost every case, be felt by a majority of
the whole ... and there is nothing to check the inducements to sacrifice
the weaker party or an obnoxious individual. Hence it is that such
democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention;
have ever been found incompatible with personal security or the
rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives
as they have been violent in their deaths. ... "
(Federalist
§10.)
But this image
of Athenian democracy is not a realistic one. Property rights and
personal security were as secure in Athens as anywhere else, if not
more so; and the constitution was a relatively stable one by Greek
standards. The Athenian democracy is generally regarded as beginning
in 508, with the reforms of Kleisthenes, and ending in 338, when Athens
like the rest of Greece fell under the yoke of the Macedonian Empire.
During that period over a century and a half all the
political convulsions that Athenian critics like to point to were
crammed into a single decade at the end of the fifth century: the
Crisis Years of 413-403. These years saw the destruction of most of
Athens' fighting force during the Sicilian expedition; an oligarchic
coup and democratic counter-coup; the mass trial of the Arginusai
Generals; Athens' defeat and occupation by Sparta; the installation
of the bloodthirsty dictatorship of the Thirty; and a violent civil
war which restored the democracy. It was in the wake of this crisis
period that Sokrates was sentenced to death by a harrowed and paranoid
jury in 399. Athens has been indicted on the basis of a quite short
and atypical period of its history (cf. Finley (1969), p. 72.). Nor
did the Athenian democracy die in political convulsion; it rebuilt
itself from the ashes and flourished for another three quarters of
a century, before finally succumbing not to domestic turmoil but to
an outside threat that swallowed up all of Greece.
In any case,
it is risky to judge Athens on the basis of notorious incidents
like the Arginusai mass trial or the execution of Sokrates. As one
scholar points out:
"Excesses
and illegalities are all too common in the history of peoples and
governments roused to anger by sorrow, tension, and passion. In
despotisms they rouse little attention and are not long remembered,
for arbitrary and excessive behavior is their normal pattern of
life. In constitutional, moderate, lawful states, however, they
are seized upon as outrages and never forgotten, precisely because
they stand out so sharply as contrary to what is usual."
(Kagan (1987),
p. 374.)
So it was in Athens.
Madison perpetuates
the stereotype of Athens as an unruly mob, gripped by irrational
whims:
"In all very
numerous assemblies, of whatever characters composed, passion never
fails to wrest the scepter from reason. Had every Athenian citizen
been a Socrates, every Athenian assembly would still have been a
mob."
(Federalist
§55.)
O Fortunate Athens,
that by amazing luck or the favor of the gods was able to gain ascendancy
over half the Greek world, to defy first the Persian and then the
Spartan war machine, and finally, after being conquered, to rise again
to a level of power and prestige almost equal to what it had lost
all under the guidance of passion rather than reason!
Madison's suggested
cure for the alleged evils of democracy draws heavily on the tradition
of the Mixed Constitution:
"A republic,
by which I mean a government in which the scheme of representation
takes place, opens a different prospect and promises the cure for
which we are seeking. ... the delegation of the government ... to
a small number of citizens elected by the rest [serves] to refine
and enlarge the public views by passing them through the medium
of a chosen body of citizens, whose wisdom may best discern the
true interest of their country and whose patriotism and love of
justice will be least likely to sacrifice it to temporary or partial
considerations. Under such a regulation it may well happen that
the public voice, pronounced by the representatives of the people,
will be more consonant to the public good than if pronounced by
the people themselves, convened for that purpose."
(Federalist
§10.)
Of course, Madison
realizes that this is not the only possible outcome:
"On the other
hand, the effect may be inverted. Men of factious tempers, of local
prejudices, or of sinister designs, may, by intrigue, by corruption,
or by other means, first obtain the suffrages, and then betray the
interests of the people."
(Federalist
§10.)
But Madison argues
that this problem can be avoided if the republic is sufficiently large.
(In this respect he is departing from the traditional republican position,
which held that a republican system could avoid collapsing into oligarchy
only if the republic were fairly small in territory and population.)
"...as each
representative will be chosen by a greater number of citizens in
the large than in the small republic, it will be more difficult
for unworthy candidates to practise with success the vicious arts
by which elections are too often carried .... The smaller the society,
the fewer probably will be the distinct parties and interests composing
it; the fewer the distinct parties and interests, the more frequently
will a majority be found of the same party; and the smaller the
number of individuals composing a majority, and the smaller the
compass within which they are placed, the more easily will they
concert and execute their plans of oppression. Extend the sphere
and you take in a greater variety of parties and interests; you
make it less probable that a majority of the whole will have a common
motive to invade the rights of other citizens; or if such a common
motive exists, it will be more difficult for all who feel it to
discover their own strength and to act in unison with each other.
... A rage for paper money, for an abolition of debts, for an equal
division of property, or for any other improper or wicked project,
will be less apt to pervade the whole body of the Union than a particular
member of it ...."
(Federalist
§10.)
This idea of Madison's
was a brilliant one. Unfortunately, experience has shown it to be
mistaken. As I wrote in the premiere issue of Formulations:
"Such was
the intent of the Framers of the U.S. Constitution .... the broad
base of representation was expected to ensure that no special interest
could succeed in manipulating the government. ... As we have since
learned all too well, the experiment eventually proved to be a failure.
Madison and his colleagues could not foresee the logrolling process
whereby ... special interests ('factions') that were intended to
hold one another in perpetual check instead made concessions to
one another's ambitions in exchange for like concessions to their
own."
("Virtual
Cantons: A New Path to Freedom?," Formulations, Vol. I,
No. 1 (Autumn 1993).)
The large size
of the American republic only made things worse, as the widely dispersed
majority were distant from their representatives and unable to concentrate
their voice.
The last modern
critic of Athenian democracy that I shall consider is Isabel Paterson,
whose 1943 book The
God of the Machine (published the same year as Rose Wilder
Lane's The
Discovery of Freedom, Ayn Rand's The
Fountainhead, and Albert Jay Nock's Memoirs
of a Superfluous Man) remains one of the classics of 20th
century libertarian thought. Paterson is obsessed with the importance
of political structure an obsession I share. To quote my
first Formulations article once more:
"What would
the constitution of a free nation look like? In trying to answer
that question we immediately think in terms of a Bill of Rights,
restrictions on governmental power, and so forth. And any constitution
worth having would certainly include those things. But if a constitution
is to be more than a wish list, it must also specify the political
structure necessary to ensure that these freedoms are not eroded
or ignored. Consider the old Soviet Constitution, which guaranteed
all sorts of fine-sounding freedoms for its citizens but
which in practice proved only a empty promise, since its interpretation
and enforcement lay in the hands of an unfettered monolithic centralized
state.
Framing a
constitution is an exercise in public-choice economics; politicians
react to incentives, and so the political incentive structure
must be designed in such a way that those in authority cannot
profit by the aggrandizement of state power."
This is a lesson
I first learned from Paterson. It is also central to Madison's way
of thinking. Where Paterson goes wrong, I think, is that she, like
Madison, fails to recognize the political structure that existed in
democratic Athens.
Paterson condemns
Athens for a lack of checks and balances. As she sees it, Athenian
democracy represents pure majority will, without any countervailing
power to offset it: "dislocated mass," Paterson calls it. But this
is a mistake. I will admit that I would be more comfortable with
the Athenian system if proposals in the Assembly and verdicts in
the Jury Courts had required a supermajority rather than a bare
majority in order to be enacted. But all the same, the power of
the majority could hardly be described as unchecked.
For one thing,
the Athenian judiciary had the power, as we've seen, to strike down
unconstitutional legislation. For another, the wealth of the rich
minority enabled them to exert a serious influence to balance against
the will of the less affluent majority. Paterson fails to recognize
patronage as playing a role in the constitutional structure, as
she often fails to see structure that is informal and not codified
into law. (This is why she wrongly rejects anarchism as incompatible
with political structure; but that's another story.)
Pursuing this
no-structure critique, she also faults Athens for not attaching
representation to regional bases, something she sees as crucial
for stability. Here she is simply misinformed; members of the Athenian
Council represented not a mass aggregate of citizens, but regional
districts called demes.
Paterson also
complains that the Athenians had no notion of individual rights
that nothing, in principle, was beyond the scope of the democratic
government's authority. She grants that Athenian law left a wide
area of freedom to the individual, but she insists that this was
a matter of custom, not something regarded as a right. This charge
is difficult to assess; the Athenians did not have a written constitution,
and so had nothing like a Bill of Rights. But Paterson to
the contrary notwithstanding they did generally think that
there was a moral standard beyond custom, to which custom had to
answer in order to be legitimate. The Athenian playwright Sophokles
expresses the common view:
"
You knew the order not to do this thing?
I knew, of course I knew. The word was plain.
And still you dared to overstep these laws?
For me it was not Zeus who made that order.
Nor did that Justice who lives with the gods below
mark out such laws to hold among mankind.
Nor did I think your orders were so strong
that you, a mortal man, could over-run
the gods' unwritten and unfailing laws.
Not now, not yesterday's, they always live,
and no one knows their origin in time."
(Sophokles,
Antigone
447-456.)
A similar point
is made by Perikles:
"... in public
affairs we keep to the law. This is because it commands our deep
respect. We give our obedience to those whom we put in positions
of authority, and we obey the laws themselves, especially those
which are for the protection of the oppressed, and those unwritten
laws which it is an acknowledged shame to break."
(Thucydides,
II. 37.)
Moreover, as Hansen
(1989) has shown, the Athenian democrats operated with a firm distinction
between the public sphere, which was the legitimate province of state
action, and the private sphere, which was not the state's business.
It was the Athenian philosophers, largely oligarchic in their
sympathies, or at least in favor of a Mixed Constitution and
deeply alienated from their own society, for a mix of good and bad
reasons who denied the public/private distinction; but the
Athenian democrats had a different outlook.
Like other
anti-Athenian theorists we have looked at, Paterson has an enormous
admiration for the Roman Republic. (Indeed, despite my great admiration
for her book as a whole, I must say I find her pro-Roman bias so
pronounced as to be extremely tiresome!) She sees the contrast between
Athens and Rome as one of arbitrary rule versus respect for law.
She is uncomfortably aware, however, that Roman law was generally
more brutal and oppressive than its Athenian counterpart; but she
dismisses this as irrelevant:
"To sentimentalize
Roman law and gloss over its harsh and faulty aspects is to miss
the point. Its solid virtue was its mere existence, since at worst
it proved preferable to the unpredictable will of either king or
people. In their ordinary conduct the Athenians were probably more
humane, or easygoing, than the Romans; but the quality of Roman
law was that it was dependable."
(Paterson
(1993), Ch. 3.)
But this ideal
of dependability and predictability was not a Roman monopoly; Kleon,
one of the most prominent leaders of the Athenian democrats, made
precisely the same point:
"And this
is the very worst thing to pass measures and then not abide
by them. We should realize that a city is better off with bad laws,
so long as they remain fixed, than with good laws that are being
constantly altered ...."
(Thucydides,
III. 37.)
Stability of the
law was an Athenian ideal no less than a Roman one.
It is true
that Rome probably did have greater reverence for the strict and
exact letter of the law than Athens did. But this legalistic attitude
is not necessarily to Rome's credit. For example: at one point Rome
had a law saying that it was illegal to execute a virgin. Presumably
the intent of the law was to protect virgins; but the result was
that, in order to abide by the letter of the law while evading its
spirit, executioners were legally authorized to rape virgins before
killing them. It is very difficult to imagine the Athenians standing
for this sort of thing.
Paterson does
think Athens was lacking in the rule of law:
"Though the
anecdote may have been invented as a joke which related that an
Athenian voted for the banishment of Aristides because he was tired
of hearing Aristides called The Just, the thing was not impossible
by the democratic system. In Roman law a man must be charged with
a specified act having known penalties, and convicted on something
more positive than opinion, to incur sentence. He could not be guilty
for no cause."
(Paterson
(1993), Ch. 3.)
But this contrast
is unfounded. The Athenians were as committed to the rule of law as
the Romans were. The ostracism example is a rather bad one, because
ostracism was the only case in which an Athenian citizen could
be exiled for no crime, and it was used very infrequently. (And of
course, as we've seen, Paterson misses the point of the Aristeides
anecdote.) In the pages of Thucydides one finds that it is the Athenian
democrats above all else who are the most likely to praise the idea
of respect for law. And it is odd that Paterson so roundly condemns
the Athenian practice of ostracism, when she praises the Romans' habit,
during the Imperial period, of assassinating their Emperors (about
a third of all Roman Emperors died by assassination) as a useful constitutional
adaptation, akin to a letting a fuse blow to protect a circuit in
event of a short. Surely the Greek ostrakon, whatever its faults,
was a more civilized response to the threat posed by powerful individuals
than the Roman dagger.
We should also
not be too quick to agree with Paterson that the content of
the law is relatively unimportant so long as the law is stable and
its enforcement predictable. It is useful to remind ourselves of
what some of the laws were under Paterson's beloved Roman Republic.
The common people were forbidden to assemble in large numbers except
on official state business; magistrates could impose penalties on
any citizen, without due process or the right of appeal; military
discipline was arbitrary and brutal; and male heads of households
were authorized to put their wives and grown children to death if
they so pleased. Roman women were mere adjuncts of men, and were
not even allowed to have names.3 On just about
any comparison between Athens and Rome, Athens comes out rather
well.
What Can
We Learn From Athens?
Today we call
the United States a democracy. But the Athenians would have called
it an oligarchy or at best a Mixed Constitution. They would
have seen our reliance on an electoral system as reinforcing the
power of a wealthy, privileged elite whose manipulation of the media
and restrictions on ballot access ensure continued success at the
polls. The notion that America is run by majority rule is one the
Athenians would have found ludicrous; they would have seen that
America is run by a tiny minority consisting of public officials
and the wealthy interests that support them.
Libertarians
are fond of echoing the conservatives' dictum that America's founders
wanted a republic, not a democracy. What we mean when we say this
is that they wanted a system in which neither the majority nor the
minority could run roughshod over the other, rather than a system
that simply empowers the majority. To that extent, they were right.
But for the founding fathers, or many of them, this translated into
a preference for a constitution based more on the Roman model than
on the Athenian; and this last preference may well have been the
fatal error that opened the door to an American Leviathan.
What does the
Athenian constitution have to teach us? Which successful features
of Athenian law could be usefully borrowed by those seeking to establish
a free nation? Here, I think, are some of the lessons that we can
learn from that free-nation experiment of two and a half millennia
ago:
-
Take the
dangers of patronage far more seriously than libertarians are
accustomed to doing, and try to devise methods of circumventing
its influence.
-
Select
a substantial number of government officials by lot in order
to break the power of special interests and make the government
more representative of the governed. (Just consider: under the
Athenian system there would already be libertarians in
Congress!)
-
Impose
strict term limits on public offices.
-
Make sure
the salaries for public office are high enough to ensure that
those who are not independently wealthy can afford to serve.
(Out of understandable frustration at the cupidity of our rulers,
many libertarians have suggested that public officials should
be paid little or nothing. It's an attractive idea, but I think
the Athenians were right in regarding it as a dangerous mistake.)
-
At the
end of each term, subject officials to a public review of their
conduct in office.
-
Make it
a prosecutable offense for legislators to pass unconstitutional
laws or to win votes through deception.
-
Increase
the scope of citizen referendum.
-
Increase
the sovereignty of juries by eliminating compulsory empanelment,
voir-dire, rules of evidence, and the like. (Though I resist,
on egalitarian grounds, the Athenian idea of making juries not
legally accountable for their decisions, unless such an exemption
is agreed to by both parties to the dispute. Also, a right of
appeal would be nice.)
-
Give juries
the power of judicial review. (This goes one step beyond the
power, already advocated by many libertarians, to nullify the
application of a law in a particular case, to the power to actually
strike down the law and in effect repeal it for everybody. But
an exemption should be made for laws that are, e.g., basic constitutional
guarantees of rights.)
-
Make juries
extremely large, so that they will be more representative.
-
Treat
all cases as civil cases, with the victim rather than the state
directing the prosecution.
-
Replace
criminal cases with class-action suits.
-
Let juries
decide between alternate penalties suggested by prosecutor and
defendant.
-
Offer
exile (temporary or permanent) as a cost-effective alternative
to imprisonment.
-
Foster
competition among systems of dispute adjudication.
-
Shift
the focus of law enforcement from governmental police to self-help.
It seems appropriate
to give the last word to Perikles, the most articulate and inspiring
defender of the Athenian constitution:
"Let me say
that our system of government does not copy the institutions of
our neighbors. ... Our constitution is called a democracy because
power is in the hands not of a minority but of the whole people.
... everyone is equal before the law ... what counts is not membership
of a particular class, but the actual ability which the man possesses.
No one, so long as he has it in him to be of service to the state,
is kept in political obscurity because of poverty. And, just as
our political life is free and open, so is our day-to-day life in
our relations with each other. We do not get into a state with our
next-door neighbour if he enjoys himself in his own way, nor do
we give him the kind of black looks which, though they do no real
harm, still do hurt people's feelings. We are free and tolerant
in our private lives; but in public affairs we keep to the law.
...
When our
work is over, we are in a position to enjoy all kinds of recreation
for our spirits. ... in our own homes we find a beauty and a good
taste which delight us everyday and which drive away our cares.
...
Our city
is open to the world, and we have no periodical deportations in
order to prevent people observing or finding out secrets which
might be of military advantage to the enemy. ... The Spartans,
from their earliest boyhood, are submitted to the most laborious
training in courage; we pass our lives without all these restrictions,
and yet are just as ready to face the same dangers as they are.
... There are certain advantages, I think, in our way of meeting
danger voluntarily, with an easy mind, instead of with a laborious
training, with natural rather than state-induced courage. ...
We regard
wealth as something to be properly used, rather than as something
to boast about. As for poverty, no one need be ashamed to admit
it: the real shame is in not taking practical measures to escape
from it. ... We Athenians, in our own persons, take our decisions
on policy or submit them to proper discussions ....
Taking everything
together then, I declare that our city is an education to Greece,
and I declare that in my opinion each single one of our citizens,
in all the manifold aspects of life, is able to show himself the
rightful lord and owner of his own person, and do this, moreover,
with exceptional grace and exceptional versatility. ... Mighty
indeed are the marks and monuments of our empire which we have
left. Future ages will wonder at us, as the present age wonders
at us now. ...
What I would
prefer is that you should fix your eyes every day on the greatness
of Athens as she really is, and should fall in love with her.
... Make up your minds that happiness depends on being free ...."
(Thucydides,
II. 37-43.) D
Notes
1 "The
celebrated Pericles, in compliance with the resentment of a prostitute,
at the expense of much of the blood and treasure of his countrymen,
attacked, vanquished, and destroyed the city of the Samnians.
The same man, stimulated by private pique against the Megarensians,
another nation of Greece, or to avoid a prosecution with which he
was threatened as an accomplice in a supposed theft of the statuary
of Phidias, or to get rid of the accusations prepared to be brought
against him for dissipating the funds of the state in the purchase
of popularity, or from a combination of all these causes, was the
primitive author of that famous and fatal war, distinguished in
the Grecian annals by the name of the Peloponnesian war;
which, after various vicissitudes, intermissions, and renewals,
terminated in the ruin of the Athenian commonwealth."
(Alexander Hamilton, Federalist §6.)
Here Hamilton
relies not even on the moderately biased account of Thucydides,
but the centuries-after-the-fact gossip and speculations of the
Platonist historian Plutarch. For a more balanced assessment of
the origins of the Peloponnesian War, one that shows Perikles' policy
to have been primarily a defensive rather than an aggressive one,
see Kagan (1969).
2 The only version of a Mixed Constitution for which much
can be said is the old Icelandic constitution, with Chieftains being
analogous to Horsemen with the right to hold political office, heads
of households being analogous to Yokemen with the right to choose
such officers but not to become them, and everybody else being analogous
to Menials entirely dependent on the good will of the other two
classes. If the Icelandic constitution was more favorable to freedom
than the Roman one, it is only because it had less centralization
of power. (And if Iceland was a more anarchistic version of Rome,
perhaps what lovers of freedom need is a more anarchistic version
of Athens.)
3 Roman men had names like our own a first name peculiar
to oneself, and a last name representing one's family. (Sometimes
a nickname, either of the individual or of the family, was added
as a third name.) But women had only a last name their father's
family name but no personal name. So, for example, if a man
was named Marcus Sempronius, his son might be named Gaius Sempronius
or Lucius Sempronius or Titus Sempronius, but his daughter would
simply be named Sempronia (the feminine version of Sempronius).
If he had several daughters, they would all be named Sempronia.
Parents told their daughters apart by numbering them; for
example, the fourth daughter of Marcus Sempronius would be named
Sempronia Four. The position of Athenian women was nothing to brag
about, but at least Greek women were regarded as having enough of
an independent identity to be worthy of having names. (Nor
were their husbands authorized to execute them.)
Ancient
Sources
Anonymous.
Dissoi Logoi.
Aristophanes. Comedies.
Aristotle. Constitution
of the Athenians.
---. Politics.
Demosthenes. Orations.
Euripides. The
Suppliant Women. (quotations from the U. of Chicago edition)
Herodotus. Histories.
Livy. History
of Rome from its Foundation.
Luke. Acts
of the Apostles.
"Old Oligarch." Constitution
of the Athenians.
Plato. Apology
of Socrates.
---. Laws.
---. Menexenos.
---. Republic.
---. Statesman.
Plutarch. Parallel
Lives.
Polybius. Histories.
Solon. Poems.
Sophokles. Antigone.
(quotations from the U. of Chicago edition)
Thucydides. History
of the Peloponnesian War. (quotations from Penguin edition)
Xenophon. Constitution of the Lakedaimonians.
---. Hellenica.
---. Recollections
of Socrates.
---. Resources of Athens.
Modern Sources
Boardman, John;
Griffin, Jasper; and Murray, Oswyn, eds. 1986. The
Oxford History of the Classical World. Oxford University
Press, Oxford.
Finley, M.
I. 1969. Aspects
of Antiquity: Discoveries and Controversies. Viking Press,
New York.
--- . 1994. Politics in the Ancient World. Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge.
Forrest, W.
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June
21, 2004
Roderick
T. Long [send him mail]
is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Auburn
University; author of Reason
and Value: Aristotle versus Rand; Editor of the Libertarian
Nation Foundation periodical Formulations;
and an Adjunct Scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell in 1992,
and maintains the website Praxeology.net,
as well as the web journal In
a Blog's Stead.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Roderick
T. Long Archives
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