登陆注册
20034800000075

第75章 XV(2)

What kinds of offices, and how many, are necessary to the existence of a state, and which, if not necessary, yet conduce to its well being are much more important considerations, affecting all constitutions, but more especially small states. For in great states it is possible, and indeed necessary, that every office should have a special function; where the citizens are numerous, many may hold office. And so it happens that some offices a man holds a second time only after a long interval, and others he holds once only; and certainly every work is better done which receives the sole, and not the divided attention of the worker. But in small states it is necessary to combine many offices in a few hands, since the small number of citizens does not admit of many holding office: for who will there be to succeed them? And yet small states at times require the same offices and laws as large ones; the difference is that the one want them often, the others only after long intervals. Hence there is no reason why the care of many offices should not be imposed on the same person, for they will not interfere with each other. When the population is small, offices should be like the spits which also serve to hold a lamp. We must first ascertain how many magistrates are necessary in every state, and also how many are not exactly necessary, but are nevertheless useful, and then there will be no difficulty in seeing what offices can be combined in one. We should also know over which matters several local tribunals are to have jurisdiction, and in which authority should be centralized: for example, should one person keep order in the market and another in some other place, or should the same person be responsible everywhere? Again, should offices be divided according to the subjects with which they deal, or according to the persons with whom they deal: I mean to say, should one person see to good order in general, or one look after the boys, another after the women, and so on? Further, under different constitutions, should the magistrates be the same or different? For example, in democracy, oligarchy, aristocracy, monarchy, should there be the same magistrates, although they are elected, not out of equal or similar classes of citizen but differently under different constitutions- in aristocracies, for example, they are chosen from the educated, in oligarchies from the wealthy, and in democracies from the free- or are there certain differences in the offices answering to them as well, and may the same be suitable to some, but different offices to others? For in some states it may be convenient that the same office should have a more extensive, in other states a narrower sphere. Special offices are peculiar to certain forms of government: for example that of probuli, which is not a democratic office, although a bule or council is. There must be some body of men whose duty is to prepare measures for the people in order that they may not be diverted from their business; when these are few in number, the state inclines to an oligarchy: or rather the probuli must always be few, and are therefore an oligarchical element. But when both institutions exist in a state, the probuli are a check on the council; for the counselors is a democratic element, but the probuli are oligarchical. Even the power of the council disappears when democracy has taken that extreme form in which the people themselves are always meeting and deliberating about everything. This is the case when the members of the assembly receive abundant pay; for they have nothing to do and are always holding assemblies and deciding everything for themselves. A magistracy which controls the boys or the women, or any similar office, is suited to an aristocracy rather than to a democracy; for how can the magistrates prevent the wives of the poor from going out of doors? Neither is it an oligarchical office; for the wives of the oligarchs are too fine to be controlled.

Enough of these matters. I will now inquire into appointments to offices. The varieties depend on three terms, and the combinations of these give all possible modes: first, who appoints? secondly, from whom? and thirdly, how? Each of these three admits of three varieties: (A) All the citizens, or (B) only some, appoint. Either (1) the magistrates are chosen out of all or (2) out of some who are distinguished either by a property qualification, or by birth, or merit, or for some special reason, as at Megara only those were eligible who had returned from exile and fought together against the democracy. They may be appointed either (a) by vote or (b) by lot.

Again, these several varieties may be coupled, I mean that (C) some officers may be elected by some, others by all, and (3) some again out of some, and others out of all, and (c) some by vote and others by lot. Each variety of these terms admits of four modes.

For either (A 1 a) all may appoint from all by vote, or (A 1 b) all from all by lot, or (A 2 a) all from some by vote, or (A 2 b) all from some by lot (and from all, either by sections, as, for example, by tribes, and wards, and phratries, until all the citizens have been gone through; or the citizens may be in all cases eligible indiscriminately); or again (A 1 c, A 2 c) to some offices in the one way, to some in the other. Again, if it is only some that appoint, they may do so either (B 1 a) from all by vote, or (B 1 b) from all by lot, or (B 2 a) from some by vote, or (B 2 b) from some by lot, or to some offices in the one way, to others in the other, i.e., (B 1 c) from all, to some offices by vote, to some by lot, and (B 2 C) from some, to some offices by vote, to some by lot. Thus the modes that arise, apart from two (C, 3) out of the three couplings, number twelve. Of these systems two are popular, that all should appoint from all (A 1 a) by vote or (A 1 b) by lot- or (A 1 c) by both. That all should not appoint at once, but should appoint from all or from some either by lot or by vote or by both, or appoint to some offices from all and to others from some ('by both' meaning to some offices by lot, to others by vote), is characteristic of a polity. And (B 1 c) that some should appoint from all, to some offices by vote, to others by lot, is also characteristic of a polity, but more oligarchical than the former method. And (A 3 a, b, c, B 3 a, b, c) to appoint from both, to some offices from all, to others from some, is characteristic of a polity with a leaning towards aristocracy. That (B 2) some should appoint from some is oligarchical- even (B 2 b) that some should appoint from some by lot (and if this does not actually occur, it is none the less oligarchical in character), or (B 2 C) that some should appoint from some by both. (B 1 a) that some should appoint from all, and (A 2 a) that all should appoint from some, by vote, is aristocratic.

These are the different modes of constituting magistrates, and these correspond to different forms of government: which are proper to which, or how they ought to be established, will be evident when we determine the nature of their powers. By powers I mean such powers as a magistrate exercises over the revenue or in defense of the country; for there are various kinds of power: the power of the general, for example, is not the same with that which regulates contracts in the market.

同类推荐
  • 通制条格

    通制条格

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 元始无量度人上品妙经内义

    元始无量度人上品妙经内义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 達方鎮年表

    達方鎮年表

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 万善同归集

    万善同归集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 词品-郭麟

    词品-郭麟

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 生存奇迹和创世之旅

    生存奇迹和创世之旅

    本文为宇宙末期,这里的末世没有丧尸,这里的生物都变异。昆虫庞大如山,宠物狗变得如洪荒猛兽,庞大的老鼠和猫满街走!太阳开始加速燃烧,星球引力在消失。地球人的生存环境变得恶劣,出现异能者,出现了进化变异人类。一个少年,他在宇宙末期的生存奇迹,从这里开始!
  • tfboys之樱树下相遇

    tfboys之樱树下相遇

    主要是写女主和男主的从在樱树下相识,到相知,相爱,的恋爱传奇
  • 魔铠战将

    魔铠战将

    看完圣斗士星矢最新剧场《圣域传说》的殷雄,因为睡前的愿望被划过夜空的流星实现,一觉醒来发现自己真的拥有了一个类似电影中小强们佩戴的圣衣挂件。只是还未来得及试验这个东西究竟能不能真的召唤出圣衣,他便被卷入了一场“圣斗士”的战斗。看着眼前激烈的战斗,殷雄悚然领悟,被改变的不是他,而是全世界!
  • 征服与征服

    征服与征服

    看腻了言情的YY?看腻了无限的金手指?看腻了天下无敌的主角?来我这里吧,这是一本纯正的西方玄幻。一部纯正的西方奇幻小说,带你走进光怪陆离的西方奇幻世界。本书,势必成为超越指环王与魔戒的传奇小说。新人新书,不足之处请大家指出。本书每日三更,喜欢的请收藏,谢谢伟大的书友们。
  • 快穿之皇帝攻略

    快穿之皇帝攻略

    在很久很久以前,有一家神秘的风水店名叫“夏木繁阴”,店主是位千年不死的神秘道士,她收集每一世命带“帝王星”与“紫微星”的人的灵魂,与他们签订契约,穿梭时空,改写命运。我们的故事,从这里开始——
  • 校霸:紫瞳废少

    校霸:紫瞳废少

    这是一部校园玄幻小说,废柴的中学生文凌因为体内上古神兽之灵的觉醒,一步步逆袭成为校霸。一路走来,不弃的兄弟,不离的爱情,不散的友情。希望书友们能喜欢,先在这而谢谢大家的喜欢
  • 栲栳山人诗集

    栲栳山人诗集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 无限恐怖之萧雄路

    无限恐怖之萧雄路

    精神力过人却喜欢对穿裙子女生恶作剧的萧雄被主神拉入了无限的世界。同郑吒,楚轩等中州队队友一起在恐怖片中挣扎求生!选择了血精灵血统,走上对魔法的渴求这条道路,最终能给中州队带来哪些改变,萧雄又能在无限的世界里成长到什么程度呢!请大家关注本书,多多支持!(本书只在前面几部加入中州队,主角有了一定实力后便会开始新的冒险,阿凡达,黑夜传说等都会一一呈现,带来不一样的无限恐怖)
  • 总裁有令,妈咪不准带娃跑

    总裁有令,妈咪不准带娃跑

    年少无知的楚乔错把谎言当真情,怀胎十月,却只是背叛一场。六年后,一个叫尚方彦的陌生男人出现在楚乔的面前,他说,只要她做他一年合格的妻子,他就让她的儿子回到她的身边。为了夺回儿子,楚乔毅然和这个才见过一次面的男人签下了婚姻契约。第二天,一个缩小版的尚方彦出现在楚乔的面前。楚乔指着孩子问尚方彦,“他是谁?”尚方彦挑了挑眉梢答,“我儿子,尚方叙。”一年后。楚乔一手拉着行礼一手牵着儿子,“儿子,咱们走。”尚方彦可怜巴巴地望着楚乔,“老婆,咱别闹了。”楚乔斜睨着尚方彦嗤了一声,指着桌上的婚姻契约书道,“先生,契约昨天已经到期了,所以,别乱叫。”
  • 魅惑校园:恶魔撒旦惹上身

    魅惑校园:恶魔撒旦惹上身

    自从转入“枫雅”贵族学校,一切就打乱了规律。第一天就和校草吵架,然后是女生们的“无尽追杀”。第二天又从天而降一个帅哥当同桌。第三天又跟恶魔校草同桌……这让人怎么活呀!“且看我安小芝如何把你们一一驯服!