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'''Politics''' is the art, science, and activities involving the government or the state. The word "politics" is derived from the Greek word πολιτική (politiki) which was in turn derived from the words πόλη (poli) meaning city or state and πολίτης (politis) meaning citizen.  Some of the earliest writings on politics are those of [[Aristotle]], particularly his treatise entitled ''[[Politics (Aristotle)|Politics]]'' which introduced the concepts of six types of governance. According to Aristotle, every Athenian was a "zoon politikon", a "political animal". This idea reflects the fact that every citizen was connected to the "res publica", the public life of the polis, since he could take decisions and actions that would affect the city inside the Ecclesia (the popular assembly in ancient Athens).  
Politics is about living together in communities. From the time when  people first had dealings other than with members of their own  families, they have regulated their interactions by customs and rules. As “social animals” , humans have always tended to form groups, the better to enjoy the benefits of cooperation and mutual defence, and  groups have  merged to form tribes, city-states and nation-states. The subject-matter of politics is the conduct of relations within and between those groups, and it  includes  beliefs concerning  the proper regulation of that conduct  and  the systems and institutions that have been adopted for doing so.


In the 10th Chapter of his treatise, Artistotle proposes one of the first typologies of political systems. These six types of governance are classified according to two main criteria: the number of holders of the supreme power (the quantitative criterium), and the main purpose of the power holders (the qualitative criterium). The first three types of governance are monarchy (where there is only one power holder: the monarch), aristocracy (where only a few hold the power), and the republic (where the people are the power holders). In these three types, the purpose of the power holders is the public interest. These are therefore just forms of government according to Aristotle. However, they can deviate from their original purpose because of the emergence of personal interests. Monarchy becomes tyranny under the rule of a despotic monarch, aristocracy degenerates in oligarchy when the government serves the purpose of the rich minority, and the republic becomes a democracy where only the poor govern. Democracy is not a just form of government according to Aristotle because the poor become tyrants and are dominated by demagogues.
==Ideologies==


In 1651, [[Thomas Hobbes]] published his most famous work, ''[[Leviathan (book)|Leviathan]]'', in which he proposed a model of early human development to justify the creation of a governmentHobbes described an ideal [[state of nature]] wherein every person had equal right to every resource in nature and was free to use any means to acquire those resources. He claimed that such an arrangement created a “war of all against all” (''[[bellum omnium contra omnes]]''). Further, he noted that men would enter into a [[social contract]] and would give up absolute rights for certain protectionsHobbes made a second claim: that the solution to the aggression problem was a centralized authoritarian [[state]], which he called Leviathan.
===The functions of ideology===
A widely accepted set of  beliefs  about social behaviour may be termed an ideology if its rationale is known, or a myth if it is not. The term ideology is often associated in people’s minds with dogmatism and intolerance, but in fact, every society has needed a set  of shared assumptions to provide it with a settled view  about living togetherThat settled view has typically included  conscious beliefs that are topics of everyday discussion, and subconscious attitudes that are seldom examined. It has enabled generally acceptable outcomes to be achieved without debating their underlying rationale. But what group members have considered to be a prized tradition, may  have appeared  to outsiders to be an irrational ideology.


While it appears that social cooperation and [[dominance hierarchy|dominance hierarchies]] predate human societies, Hobbes' model illustrates a rationale for the creation of [[societies]] ([[polity|polities]]).
===Social ideologies===
Myths and ideologies about personal status and the nature of authority are part of the foundation of every political ideology.  For example, the medieval myth of "the [[Chain of Being]]" <ref>
[http://www.theotherpages.org/poems/pope-e1.html Alexander Pope Essay on Man ]</ref>  which defined the hierarchical  status of every living thing, was the foundation of feudalism, and its subconscious influence is believed to underlie  more recent attitudes to race and gender. And in the nineteenth century, the myth of  "the ladder of life" <ref>[http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Evolution.htm  see ''Evolution of Species'' by Michael Lahanas]</ref> which envisaged evolution as generating a process  in which each emerging  type of human being is an improvement on its predecessor was the rationale for a political ideology of  the survival of the fittest  known as "[[Social Darwinism]]" <ref> [http://www.cod.edu/people/faculty/fancher/SocDarw.htm Social Darwinism ]</ref>.  The formation of groups has led to “we/they” myths about the superiority of members over non-members <ref> [http://www.age-of-the-sage.org/psychology/social/sherif_robbers_cave_experiment.html see The Robbers Cave Experiment ]</ref>  and the creation of ethnic and  nationalist ideologies.


[[V.G. Childe]] described the transformation of human society that took place around [[6th millennium BCE|6000 BCE]] as an urban revolutionAmong the features of this new type of civilization were the institutionalization of social stratification, non-agricultural specialised crafts (including priests and lawyers), taxation, and writing, all of which require clusters of densely populated settlements or [[city-states]].
===Political ideologies===
Several [[political ideologies]] have  made repeated appearances over the course of history. [[Authoritarianism]], in the form of government by a trained elite, was advocated in the 4th century BCE by [[Plato]] <ref>[http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/republic.html Plato ''The Republic'']</ref> it was advocated in the 17th century  by [[Thomas Hobbes]] <ref>[http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl302/texts/hobbes/leviathan-contents.html  Hobbes ''Leviathan''] </ref>  as the need for a controlling authority to prevent the chaos of a  “war of all against all”,  and it emerged again in the 20th century as the philosophy of [[Nazism]] <ref>[http://www.hitler.org/writings/Mein_Kampf/  Adolf Hitler Mein Kampf]</ref> .  [[Democracy]], in the form that gave every citizen a right to participate in every communal decision, made a brief appearance in [[Pericles]]’ Athens in the 6th century BCE <ref>[http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/GREECE/PERICLES.HTM Thucidides: ''Pericles’ Funeral Oration'']</ref> , but was  rejected in that form for centuries thereafter.  In particular, the founders of the United States constitution rejected it  in favour of "representation ingrafted upon democracy" as advocated in [[Thomas Paine]]’s [[Rights of Man]]  <ref>[http://www.ushistory.org/paine/rights/ Thomas Paine ''The Rights of Man'']</ref>.  The concept of [[Representative Government]], in which the people  delegate decision-making powers to an authority on condition that it acts in their interest, had been put forward in the 17th century in the second of [[John Locke]]’s treatises On Civil Government <ref>[http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/l/locke/john/l81s/ John Locke ''On Civil Government''] </ref> and was further  developed  in the 19th century in John Stuart Mill’s Representative Government <ref>[http://philosophy.eserver.org/mill-representative-govt.txt John Stuart Mill Representative Government]</ref>. The ideology  of [[Socialism]], as the belief  that all property should be communally owned, was put forward in the 16th century in [[Thomas More’s Utopia]] <ref>
[http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl302/texts/more/utopia-contents.html  Thomas More ''Utopia'']</ref> ; publicised in the early 19th century by [[Henri de Saint-Simon]] <ref>[http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1O104-SaintSimonCldHnrdRvryCmtd.html Henri de Saint-Simon]</ref> and developed into an influential creed in [[Karl Marx’s Das Kapital]]. <ref>[http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ Karl Marx ''Das Kapital'' ]</ref>.  The ideologies of [[Liberalism]] and [[Libertarianism]] are attributable to several of the philosophers of the enlightenment. Both are concerned to preserve individual freedom from state interference, but Liberals, such as [[Friedrich von Hayek]] <ref>[http://www.questia.com/read/108083239 see Friedrich von Hayek’s ''Road to Serfdom'']</ref>
acknowledge the need to impose charges for good that must be financed by the stare, whereas Libertarians do not. In opposition to those beliefs, the  ideology  of [[Communitarianism]]  that was put forward by [[Amitai Etzioni]] <ref>[http://www.amitaietzioni.org/  Amitai Etzioni,s website]</ref>  lays greater emphasis upon the contribution of community activity to individual welfare.


In recent years '''politics''' has also been used in a pejorative manner with regard to the activities within organizations such as in the phrase "[[office politics]]".  At one time '''politics''' also referred to the academic study of government activities (i.e. "He is a professor of politics.") but the term '''[[political science]]''' is now more commonly used.
==Theories of government==


== Political Concepts ==
==Current forms of government==


* '''[[Political power|Power]]''' -- [[Max Weber]] defined power as the ability to impose one's will upon another, while [[Hannah Arendt]] states that "political power corresponds to the human ability not just to act but to act in concert."
==Political Institutions==
* '''[[Authority]]''' is the ability to enforce laws, to exact obedience, to command, to determine, or to judge.
* A '''[[government]]''' is the body that has the authority to make and enforce rules or laws.
* '''[[Legitimacy]]''' is an attribute of government gained through the acquisition and application of power in accordance with recognized or accepted standards or principles.
* '''[[Sovereignty]]''' is the ability of a government to exert control over its territory free from outside influence.


== Authority and legitimacy ==
==References==
 
<references/>
[[Max Weber]] identified three sources of legitimacy for authority, known as the [[tripartite classification of authority]]. He proposed three reasons why people follow the orders of those who give them:
 
=== Traditional ===
 
[[Traditional domination|Traditional authorities]] receive loyalty because they continue and support the preservation of existing values, the status quo. Traditional authority has the longest history.  [[Patriarchy|Patriarchal]] (and more rarely [[Matriarchy|matriarchal]]) societies gave rise to hereditary monarchies where authority was given to descendants of previous leaders. Followers submit to this authority because "we've always done it that way."  Examples of traditional authoritarians include [[absolute monarch]]s.
 
=== Charismatic ===
 
[[Charismatic domination|Charismatic authority]] grows out of the personal charm or the strength of an individual personality (see [[cult of personality]] for the most extreme version).  Charismatic regimes are often short-lived, seldom outliving the charismatic figure that leads them.
 
Leaders of charismatic regimes were for example: [[Alexander the Great]], [[Cleopatra VII|Cleopatra]], [[Julius Caesar]], [[Augustus]], [[Constantine I|Constantine the Great]], [[Charlemagne]], [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]], the [[Emperor of Japan|Emperors of Japan]] and the 20th century dictators [[Joseph Stalin]], [[Benito Mussolini]], [[Adolf Hitler]], [[Mao Zedong]] and [[Fidel Castro]].
 
For a charismatic regime to survive the rule of the individual personality, it must transform its legitimacy into a different form of authority. An example of this would be Augustus' efforts to create the position of the [[Roman Empire|Roman]] [[principate]] and establish a ruling dynasty, which could be viewed as a shift to a traditional form of authority, in the form of the principate that would exist in Rome for more than 400 years after his death.
 
=== Legal-rational ===
 
[[Legal domination|Legal-rational authorities]] receive their ability to compel behavior by virtue of the office that they hold. It is the authority that demands obedience to the office rather than the office holder. Modern democracies are examples of legal-rational regimes. People also abide by legal-rational authority because it makes sense to do so for their own good, as well as for the greater good of society.
 
=== Other considerations ===
 
Often hybrid forms of the above will be found, especially in transition from one form to another, such as in the transition from the [[Weimar Republic]] to the Nazi domination of Germany, in which the Nazi party gradually suspended many laws regarding various civil rights for an indefinite period.
 
== See also ==
 
*[[Politics by country]]
*[[Political science]]
*[[Political history]]
*[[List of political scientists|Political scientists]]
*[[Comparative government]]
*[[International relations]]
*[[Political economy]]
*[[Political philosophy]]
*[[Political psychology]]
*[[Form of government]]
*[[Sovereignty]]
*[[Public administration]]
*[[Consent of the governed]]
*[[Theories of political behavior]]
 
== In Famous Quotations ==
 
* [[Harold Lasswell]] defined politics as "who gets what, when, where, and how."
* [[Mao Zedong]] -- "Politics is war without bloodshed while war is politics with bloodshed."
* [[Otto von Bismarck]] -- "Politics is the art of feasibility."
 
== References ==
 
* [[Otto von Bismarck]]; remark, Aug. 11, 1867
* [[Dickerson]], Mark O. & [[Flanagan]]; Thomas, 1990 Introduction to Government & Politics: A Conceptual Approach.  third edition
* [[Gompers]], Samuel;  “Men of Labor! Be Up and Doing,” editorial, ''American Federationist'', May 1906, p. 319
* [[Mao Zedong]]; Lecture, May 1938. "On Protracted War," Selected Works, vol. 2 (1965).)

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Politics is about living together in communities. From the time when people first had dealings other than with members of their own families, they have regulated their interactions by customs and rules. As “social animals” , humans have always tended to form groups, the better to enjoy the benefits of cooperation and mutual defence, and groups have merged to form tribes, city-states and nation-states. The subject-matter of politics is the conduct of relations within and between those groups, and it includes beliefs concerning the proper regulation of that conduct and the systems and institutions that have been adopted for doing so.

Ideologies

The functions of ideology

A widely accepted set of beliefs about social behaviour may be termed an ideology if its rationale is known, or a myth if it is not. The term ideology is often associated in people’s minds with dogmatism and intolerance, but in fact, every society has needed a set of shared assumptions to provide it with a settled view about living together. That settled view has typically included conscious beliefs that are topics of everyday discussion, and subconscious attitudes that are seldom examined. It has enabled generally acceptable outcomes to be achieved without debating their underlying rationale. But what group members have considered to be a prized tradition, may have appeared to outsiders to be an irrational ideology.

Social ideologies

Myths and ideologies about personal status and the nature of authority are part of the foundation of every political ideology. For example, the medieval myth of "the Chain of Being" [1] which defined the hierarchical status of every living thing, was the foundation of feudalism, and its subconscious influence is believed to underlie more recent attitudes to race and gender. And in the nineteenth century, the myth of "the ladder of life" [2] which envisaged evolution as generating a process in which each emerging type of human being is an improvement on its predecessor was the rationale for a political ideology of the survival of the fittest known as "Social Darwinism" [3]. The formation of groups has led to “we/they” myths about the superiority of members over non-members [4] and the creation of ethnic and nationalist ideologies.

Political ideologies

Several political ideologies have made repeated appearances over the course of history. Authoritarianism, in the form of government by a trained elite, was advocated in the 4th century BCE by Plato [5] it was advocated in the 17th century by Thomas Hobbes [6] as the need for a controlling authority to prevent the chaos of a “war of all against all”, and it emerged again in the 20th century as the philosophy of Nazism [7] . Democracy, in the form that gave every citizen a right to participate in every communal decision, made a brief appearance in Pericles’ Athens in the 6th century BCE [8] , but was rejected in that form for centuries thereafter. In particular, the founders of the United States constitution rejected it in favour of "representation ingrafted upon democracy" as advocated in Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man [9]. The concept of Representative Government, in which the people delegate decision-making powers to an authority on condition that it acts in their interest, had been put forward in the 17th century in the second of John Locke’s treatises On Civil Government [10] and was further developed in the 19th century in John Stuart Mill’s Representative Government [11]. The ideology of Socialism, as the belief that all property should be communally owned, was put forward in the 16th century in Thomas More’s Utopia [12] ; publicised in the early 19th century by Henri de Saint-Simon [13] and developed into an influential creed in Karl Marx’s Das Kapital. [14]. The ideologies of Liberalism and Libertarianism are attributable to several of the philosophers of the enlightenment. Both are concerned to preserve individual freedom from state interference, but Liberals, such as Friedrich von Hayek [15] acknowledge the need to impose charges for good that must be financed by the stare, whereas Libertarians do not. In opposition to those beliefs, the ideology of Communitarianism that was put forward by Amitai Etzioni [16] lays greater emphasis upon the contribution of community activity to individual welfare.

Theories of government

Current forms of government

Political Institutions

References