Plato's reduction of political evolution to a sequence of
monarchy, aristocracy, democracy, and dictatorship
found another illustration in the history of Rome.From The Lessons of History (1968) by Will and Ariel Durant
I've been blogging that quote since 2011.
Durant also used Plato's theory to speculate about the possibility of a dictatorship in the United States.
The AI Overview links to
- Will Durant > Quotes at GoodReads, but an Amazon window came up first and wanted me to sign up for something. Fuck that guy. Does Amazon... Yup: Amazon purchased Goodreads in 2013.
- And From democracy to dictatorship - Times of Malta -- but I'm not even linking to that, because the first thing that came up there was a window asking permission to use my information.
So
maybe the AI Overview can serve as a buffer between what the internet
could have been, and what it has become. Maybe I will skip the first few
search results from now on.
The two links used by the AI were among the first three search results below the Overview. Fourth in the search results was "Excerpt from The Lessons of History by Will and Ariel Durant", a 2-page PDF from the Anacyclosis Institute. But I tripped over "Anacyclosis" and had to look it up:
Oh, I like this! The Anacyclosis Institute defines anacyclosis
as a "unified theory" of political history that examines something like
the phenomenon I describe as the Cycle of Civilization.
The Anacyclosis Institute home page displays a photo of the US Capitol building in a heavy fog, along with their logo -- ouroboros, the snake eating its own tail -- and a question all in uppercase: "What comes after democracy?"
Very
nicely done. The snake symbolizes the cyclic process; the fog makes the
future unclear; and the question is not delivered in a hushed tone.
When people also ask Who invented anacyclosis? Wikipedia responds: Polybius. I dunno who that is, but since reading Simkhovitch I have tremendous respect for the ancient authors and the value that can be drawn from their work.
Another question: What is the Polybian Cycle? The answer is given as "A Modern Interpretation of Machiavelli's Political Cycle" by Learry Gagné, a 9-page PDF that downloads automatically when the link is clicked. A separate search turned up this download page that opens a file that looks like a PDF but doesn't want to save as a PDF. Seems like a lot of trouble, but at a glance, the PDF looks like it might be useful -- for me, at least.
Learry Gagné says
Machiavelli's political cycle is "substantially different" than the
cycle of regimes devised by Polybius. In the paper, Gagné reconstructs
"Machiavelli's own political cycle, using the modern language of
rationality and emotions". He says "I am convinced that [this] model can
be built from a set of human motivations and social mechanisms found in
Machiavelli's works."
We'll see if it still sounds interesting when I try to read it.
At the Anacyclosis Institute, the "What is Anacyclosis" page says:
There is good reason to think that Polybius and his predecessors arrived at this theory empirically. After observing the rise and fall of many hundreds of city-states, most of which cycled through several of the governmental forms mentioned above, Greek political thinkers concluded that these transitions from one form to another were not random. Rather, they seemed to follow simple and recognizable patterns.
It's
hard for me to accept a statement like that, without some references
and some reading. But that's on me. Meanwhile, they've got me
interested.
At the bottom of the page they show two curved
arrows forming a circle around the word "Anacyclosis", suggesting a
cycle. Around it in a larger circle are the names of "the six regime
archetypes that the Greeks identified and which we still use today
(monarchy, tyranny, aristocracy, oligarchy, democracy, and ochlocracy or
mob-rule)" -- apparently an advance on "Plato's reduction" noted by the
Durants.
My mental picture of the Cycle of Civilization is far less developed than the cycle described by the Institute. But my first reaction to this circle of "regime archetypes" was No, that can't be right -- There's no Dark Age in their cycle.
But theirs is not a cycle of civilization, so they wouldn't have a Dark Age. And they do have the "mob rule" stage, ochlocracy, which might correspond to the dark age of the cycle I focus on. A search for ochlocracy turned up Ochlocracy, The Ancient Greek Concept That Explains Our World Today, dated January 2017. (Things have only become more ochlo-crazy since then.)
That search also turned up "Ochlocracy: Are We There Yet?" from the Marquette Law Review. I first ran into Marquette just a few days ago.
Well, it seems that these notes are mostly a reading list for myself. So I think I'll just tie it off here.