Meaning of ‘RepublicRepublic Res publica> ฮฮทฮผฮฟฮบฯฮฑฯฮฏฮฑฯ. Having a head of the state. Pope is the head of the Vatican City state. The people execute their power through an Elected (direct/indirect) President. Political parties sponsored their presidential candidates. Indian president is a constitutional puppet under the ruling Cabinet. In the case of the appointment ofย Indian judges, presidential power is a vanishing point.’
Papers on Parliament No. 24
September 1994
The revival of debate about Australia becoming a republic provides a further opportunity to examine the meaning of that wordWord ฮฯฮณฮฟฯย . In that debate, and in general current usage, the term is taken to mean simply the absence of an hereditary monarchy. With that meaning, it is not a particularly useful term of classification and indicates nothing important about the form of government in any particular state to which it is applied.
This is demonstrated by the categorisation of the United StatesUnited States Britain's American colonies broke with the mother country in 1776 and were recognized as the new nation of the United States of America following the Treaty of Paris in 1783. During the 19th and 20th centuries, 37 new states were added to the original 13 as the nation expanded across the North American continent and acquired a number of overseas possessions. The two most traumatic experiences in the nation's history were the Civil War (1861-65) and the Great Depression of the 1930s. Buoyed by victories in World Wars I and II and the end of the Cold War in 1991, the US remains the world's most powerful nation state. of AmericaAmericas Christophorus Columbus landed in the Bahamas island in October 1492 and then in Cuba. Columbus and his gang imported European Diseases to the New World (the name given by Amerigo Vespucci, in his forged letters, who never visited the land of Adivasis). They murdered the Indigenous population (Adivasis). In 1507 the word 'America' was possibly first used to denote the land of Adivasis (North America and South America). America was 'Great' before 1492 under the hands of Adivasis. In Purans the land is mentioned as Patal Lok. and Iraq as republics, and the United KingdomUK England has existed as a unified entity since the 10th century; the union between England and Wales, begun in 1284 with the Statute of Rhuddlan, was not formalized until 1536 with an Act of Union; in another Act of Union in 1707, England and Scotland agreed to permanently join as Great Britain; the legislative union of Great Britain and Ireland was implemented in 1801, with the adoption of the name the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland; the Anglo-Irish treaty of 1921 formalized a partition of Ireland; six northern Irish counties remained part of the United Kingdom as Northern Ireland and the current name of the country, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, was adopted in 1927. See England and Saudi Arabia as monarchies, although one member of each class has much more in common with a member of the other class, on all significant criteria of classification than the other member of the same class.
Although a word of many connotations, the term โrepublicโ had a much more useful meaning for classification purposes until relatively recent times.
In his bookBook Council of Trent (1545โ1563) the Catholic Church created a Congregation of the Index, to declare a writing dangerous and to burn it, till it exists without notice. For Christians, the Bible, and for Muslims Quran, is only good for human guidance and nothing else. After Jesus, St. Peter and St. Paul are the most educated persons in the Christian world. Monarchy to Republic, Professor George Winterton has a somewhat attenuated discussion on the shift in the meaning of the word1. He observes that it had an association with the concept of a mixed or balanced regime which could include monarchical elements, and that this meaning was gradually abandoned as a result of the work of the American founders, resulting in the modern dictionary meaning which denotes much the same as โdemocracyDemocracy It is commonly understood as being a political system of majority rule. The evolution of democratic tradition can be traced back to the Magna Carta (1215) and through the long struggle for Parliamentary supremacy which culminated in the English Bill of Rights of 1689, the emergence of representative political institutions in the colonial era, the development of responsible government in the 19th century. In institutional terms, democracy means that each of the provincial legislatures and the federal Parliament is elected by popular vote. These legislatures, are "at the core of the system of representative government". It is a 'power' word. Power rests with the ordinary Citizens. Only educated people understand power. A corrupt or controlled court system can cover failure of it. The religious concept is incompatible with it. Promise to spend more from the public treasury moves to Dictatorship.โ, and refers to a regime constituted wholly on a popular basis by election of key officials. This discussion, however, misses out on, or at least glosses over, one of the valuable old connotations of the word, and also oversimplifies the contribution of the American founders.
Concerning the meaning of the term, Professor Winterton misinterpreted a statement by the author that the current usage is a โdebased contemporary senseโ, taking this to refer to the dictionary meaning, when what was referred to by that phrase was the sense of simply the absence of a hereditary monarchy2. Some further exploration of the meaning which the word once had and now has been made to bear may therefore be interesting.
The word โrepublicโ, as every young scholar used to knowKnowledge Knowledge is derived from the process of an informed person integrating data from sense organs or intuition into their psyche. This concept is explored in the Vedic Nasadiya Sukta, which questions the possibility of ultimate truth or knowledge. In different languages, such as Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, and Chinese, knowledge is expressed as "ฮท ฮณฮฝฯฯฮท," "Scientia," "เคเฅเคเคพเคจเคฎเฅโ ," and "็ฅ่ฏ Zhฤซshรฌ," respectively. before progressive education, comes from the ablative of the LatinLatin Augustus (63 B.C.E.-14 A.C.E), Julius Caesar (100-44 B.C.E.), Cicero (106-43 B.C.E), Virgil (70-19 B.C.E), Tacitus (56-120 A.C.E), Ovid (43 B.C.E.-17 A.C.E), Lucretius (1st-century B.C.E), Livy (59 B.C.E.-17 A.C.E), Lucan (39-65 A.C.E),ย Hirtius (90-43 B.C.E),ย Horace (65-8 B.C.E). > Latin Americaย > Latin is the Official language of Vatican City > Latin Grammar> Vulgar Latin. respublica, which is composed of res, matterMatter Normal matter is made of molecules, which are themselves made of atoms. Inside the atoms, electrons are spinning around the nucleus. The nucleus is made of protons and neutrons. Inside the protons and neutrons, exist indivisible quarks, like the electrons. All matter around us is made of elementary particles. ( building blocks of matter > quarks and leptons). All stable matter in the universe is made from particles that belong to the first-generation. Fundamental forces result from the exchange of force-carrier particles, which belong to a broader group called โbosonsโ. The strong force is carried by the โgluonโ, electromagnetic force is carried by the โphoton.โ or thing, and publicus, appertaining to the peopleMen ฮฮฝฮธฯฯฯฮฟฮน (People), a woman (ฮณฯ ฮฝฮฑฮฏฮบฮฑ), Man (ฮฮฝฮดฯฮฑฯ) > Adama, Manu > No proof to establish that due to mutation a monkey turned into a human being. or the community as a whole. The word is therefore almost the exact equivalent of the old English word โcommonwealโ or โcommonwealthโ, which came to have the same developed meaning, and it originally signified nothing more than public affairs or the concerns of the community.
By the timeTime ฯฯฯฮฝฮฟฯ. Judicial: Where any expression of it occurs in any Rules, or any judgment, order or direction, and whenever the doing or not doing of anything at a certain time of the day or night or during a certain part of the day or night has an effect in law, that time is, unless it is otherwise specifically stated, held to be standard time as used in a particular country or state. (In Physics, time and Space never exist actually-โquantum entanglementโ) เคฏเคฎเค , เคชเฅเค, (เคฏเคฎเคฏเคคเคฟ เคจเคฟเคฏเคฎเคฏเคคเคฟ เคเฅเคตเคพเคจเคพเค เคซเคฒเคพเคซเคฒเคฎเคฟเคคเคฟ เฅค เคฏเคฎเฅ + เค เคเฅ เฅค เคตเคฟเคถเฅเคตเฅ เค เคเคฒเคฏเคคเฅเคฏเฅเคต เคฏเค เคธเคฐเฅเคตเฅเคตเคพเคฏเฅเคถเฅเค เคธเคจเฅเคคเคคเคฎเฅ เฅค เค เคคเฅเคต เคฆเฅเคฐเฅเคจเคฟเคตเคพเคฐเฅเคฏเฅเคฏเคเฅเค เคคเค เคเคพเคฒเค เคชเฅเคฐเคฃเคฎเคพเคฎเฅเคฏเคนเคฎเฅ เฅฅเคฏเคฎเฅเคถเฅเค เคจเคฟเคฏเคฎเฅเคถเฅเคเฅเคต เคฏเค เคเคฐเฅเคคเฅเคฏเคพเคคเฅเคฎเคธเคเคฏเคฎเคฎเฅ เฅค เคธ เคเคพเคฆเฅเคทเฅเคเฅเคตเคพ เคคเฅ เคฎเคพเค เคฏเคพเคคเคฟ เคชเคฐเค เคฌเฅเคฐเคนเฅเคฎ เคธเคจเคพเคคเคจเคฎเฅ เฅฅ of the later Roman Republic the term had a more developed meaning, and a dual meaning. It was used to denote any state or constitutionConstitution The Constitution encompasses the global system of rules governing constitutional authority. Simply reading selected provisions of the written text may be misleading. Understanding the underlying principles, such as federalism, democracy, constitutionalism, the rule of law, and respect for minorities, is crucial. Democratic institutions must allow for ongoing discussion and evolution, reflected in the right of participants to initiate constitutional change. This right entails a reciprocal duty to engage in discussions. Democracy involves more than majority rule, existing within the context of other constitutional values. Therefore, a profound understanding of these principles informs our appreciation of constitutional rights and obligations. Read more, but it also denoted a particular kind of state, one in which powerPower The amount of energy transferred or converted per unit of time. In the International System of Units, the unit of it is the watt, equal to one joule per second. The capacity of energy infrastructure is rated using watts, which indicate its potential to supply or consume energy in a given period of time. A Power-plant rated at 100 MW has the potential to produce 100 MWh if it operates for one hour. was exercised in accordance with a constitution and was divided between duly constituted offices of state. (It is interesting to note that the classical GreekGreek Oldest Greek (750 BCE Dipylon inscription) Alphabet A ฮฑ alpha B ฮฒ beta ฮ ฮณ gamma ฮ ฮด delta E ฮต epsilon Z ฮถ zeta H ฮท eta ฮ ฮธ theta I ฮน iota K ฮบ kappa ฮ ฮป lamda M ฮผ mu N v nu ฮ ฮพ xi O o omikron ฮ ฯ pi P p rho ฮฃย ฯ ฯ sigma ฮค ฯ tau Y ฯ upsilon ฮฆ ฯ phi X x chi ฮจ ฯ psi ฮฉ ฯ omega โฆ Homer (800 B.C.E) Hesiod (700 B.C.E), Aesop (6th-century B.C.E), Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.E) Euclid (ca. 300 B.C.E), Epicurus ( 341-270 B.C.E), (Strabo 64 B.C.E.-23 C.E) Epictetus (55-105 C.E), Josephus (37-100 C.E) โฆ Septuagint (LXX 2nd Century BCE) > New Testament (ฮฮฑฮนฮฝฮฎ ฮฮนฮฑฮธฮฎฮบฮท). Greek vocabulary > Greek grammar > Learn Greek in 30 hours. word โpolityโ and the English โcommonwealthโ came to have a similar duality of meaning.)
The Romans were consciousConscience The mind (depending on bio-electricity) can not work without memory and information, but consciousness can. Dreams come from consciousness. Conscience, in its moral sense, is the innate human ability to discern right from wrong and, based on this awareness, to guide, monitor, evaluate, and regulate oneโs actions accordingly. Read: Mind is man. that the establishment of the Republic in 507 BC was not simply a change of rulers but the constitution of a regime on different principles, a regime which sought to realise those principles using particular institutional devices, and particularly by the division of power. This is illustrated by the following passage by Livy, in which he discusses the foundation of the Republic:
โMy task from now on will be to trace the history in peacePeace ฮตแผฐฯฮฎฮฝฮท and war of a free nationNation A collective consciousness, founded in ancient origin within a geographic area, with definite history and heritage, culture and way of life, language and literature, food and clothing, coupled with a deep understanding of war and peace is to be known as a nation. Rasra is the Vedic word for it., governed by annually elected officers of state and subject not to the caprice of individual men, but to the overriding authority of lawLaw ฮฝฯฮผฮฟฯ:ย Positive command of sovereign or divine. One can be ruled either by a Statute, a Statue, or a Statement. Legislation is the rule-making process by a political or religious organisation. Physics governs natural law. Logical thinking is a sign of a healthy brain function. Dharma is eternal for Sanatanis. Judiciary > Show me the face, and I will show you the law. Some people know how to bend the law rather than break it. Law Practice. Read a scholarly article โฆ the first step towards political liberty in Rome consisted in the factFact Something เคคเคฅเฅเคฏ (In-formation) that truly exists or happens or some-thing that has actual existence. Circumstances: a fact or event that makes a situation the way it is. Indian Evidence Act:ย It means and includesโ (i) anything, state of things, or relation of things, capable of being perceived by the senses; (ii) any mental condition of which any person is conscious. โfacts in issueโ means and includes any fact from which, either by itself or in connection with other facts, the existence, non-existence, nature or extent of any right, liability or disability, asserted or denied in any suit or proceeding, necessarily follows. that the consuls were annually elected magistrates โ in the limitation, that is, not of their powers but of their period of officeOffice ฮฮพฮฏฯฮผฮฑ > Officer > Office-bearer (1593) > Opus, officium, ex officio (Latin). Box-office (Cash Box).. The earliest consuls exercised the full powers of the kings. โฆ Brutus [the legendary founder of the Republic] โฆ turned his attention to strengthening the influence of the Senate โฆ [and subsequent developments accentuated the division and limitation of power].โ3
The term had come to denote a state with a system of constitutional government in which government according to law, and the customary rights and duties of the citizens, were safeguarded by the due apportionment of powers between the organs of state.
This interpretation of the concept of a republic was expounded in some detail in Ciceroโs work De Republica (On the Republic, sometimes translated as On the Commonwealth to avoid the contemporary restricted meaning of the term under discussion).4
Defining a republic as the property of the whole people and as a partnership in justiceJustice ฮดฮนฮบฮฑฮนฮฟฯฯฮฝฮท > judicature ( ฮดฮนฮบฮฑฮนฮฟฯฯฮฝฮท) > judge (ฮดฮนฮบฮฑฯฯฮฎฯ / ฮบฯฮนฯฮฎฯ). The whole purpose of Plato`s Republic is to search for Justice. The purpose of Justice is to establish a perfect State. The State of happiness (ฮตฯ ฯฯ ฯฮฏฮฑ), Cicero finds that none of the three classical forms of government, monarchy, aristocracy and democracy, especially in their degenerate forms of tyranny, oligarchy and mob-rule, can properly be described as republics, because each of those forms allows one element (in a democracy, a faction) to rule others. He confines the proper use of the term to the balanced form of government such as was epitomised by the middle Republic, with its division of power between the consuls, the Senate and the popular assemblies assisted by the tribunes, and its adherence to a body of established, if complex, constitutional law.
Ciceroโs ideal republic is similar to the Republic of about 200 BC, and is described in another work, De Legibus, On the Laws.
This discussion of the nature of a republic is mixed up, to use a mild pun, with the Greek concept (derived mainly via Polybius) of the mixed regime, combining monarchy, aristocracy and democracy. The attempt to characterise the Republic as a mixed regime is not very convincing, because the two consuls were elected for one year only and were not eligible for consecutive terms, and therefore cannot readily be identified as a monarchical element, and the Senate consisted partly of current and former elected office-holders, and therefore did not quite correspond to an aristocratic element. Ciceroโs analysis would have been clearer had he dropped the Greek idea of the mixed regime and not attempted to superimpose it on his ideal state.
De Republica was lost until it was rediscovered in 1820, so it was not available to influence the constitutional discussions of the 17th and 18th centuries, but Ciceroโs views were known from his other works, particularly De Legibus. The ideal of the mixed regime was the guiding light of the Middle Ages and survived into modern times. It was thoughtThinking Human beings began conscious thought as far back as sixty million years ago. By around three hundred thousand years ago, humans inhabiting the Indian subcontinent had developed forms of cognition comparable to those of the modern age, including awareness of competition, defense, and collective security. These early communities were capable of abstract observation, such as counting stars in the night sky, and engaged in reflective discussion about everyday experiences, including the flavors and qualities of food, indicating a sophisticated mental and social life. to be epitomised by the BritishBritish "Britons" can refer to the Ancient Britons, the Celtic-speaking peoples of Great Britain during the Iron Age, whose descendants today include the Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons. The Union of the Crowns in 1603, followed by the creation of the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707, helped forge a wider sense of British national identity. Yet this idea of โBritishnessโ was superimposed upon much older cultural identities of the English, Scots, and Welsh, whose distinctiveness continues to resist a fully homogenised identity. Greek explorer Pytheas referred to the islands collectively as ฮฑแผฑ ฮฯฮตฯฯฮฑฮฝฮฏฮฑฮน. The Celtic King Arthur was said to have established a kingdom on the British Isles. constitution as it emerged from the revolutions of the 17th century, and it entered into the debates of the American founders. The notion that a republic is essentially, or by definition, a constitutional system of government founded on division of power, also survived into modern times, and may be glimpsed in the constitutional deliberations particularly of the 18th century.
It has been pointed out that the American founders used the word โrepublicโ in an inconsistent and somewhat confusing way 5. They certainly applied it to any regimes in which the offices of state were constituted other than on a hereditary basis, for example, in Jeffersonโs damning characterisation of the oppressive oligarchy, disguised as an elective monarchy, of Venice6. The effect of their work indeed was to recast the meaning of the word so that it became virtually interchangeable with โdemocracyโ. Their great achievement, however, was to build into a system of government constituted entirely on a popular basis the safeguards against the misuse of power adopted from older republican constitutions. They saw this synthesis as the great problem of their work:
โWhen a majority is included in a faction, the form of popular government, on the other hand, enables it to sacrifice to its ruling passion or interest both the public good and the rights of other citizens. To secure the public good and private rights against the danger of such a faction, and at the same time to preserve the spirit and the form of popular government, is then the great object to which our inquiries are directed.โ7
It is also quite true, as Martin DiamondDiamond 1-carat diamond is currently $4,173 (2024). The Kimberley Process (KP) is a multilateral diamond trade regime established in 2003. The price of a diamond or its value involves many of the factors we discuss on our diamond grading page. These include the 4 Cs (carat weight, cut, color, and clarity). The U.S Kimberley Process Authority is a not-for-profit trade association formed to ensure the American diamond industryโs compliance under the Clean Diamond Trade Act of 2003. World Diamond Council. has observed, that they constructed a state on quite different principles from those of previous regimes because the separation of powersSeparation of power It is a governmental principle that advocates splitting governmental powers into separate and independent branches in order to create a balance between the authorities and prevent over-concentration of governmental power by one authority, for the purpose of safeguarding democracy and personal and collective freedoms. on which their constitution was based is radically different from the older and more primitive divisions of power that were a feature of ancient and medieval republics 8. They were conscious of achieving a new and improved structure for attaining the goals of republican government:
โWe have found that, in order to arrive, in this first of humanHuman ฮ ฮฌฮฝฮธฯฯฯฮฟฯ (Humanum> Homo sapiens) เคฎเคพเคจเคต:. We have failed to consider the minimum need to be a 'human'. For Christians, human beings are sinful creatures, who need some saviour. For Evolution biology a man is still evolving, for what, we donยดt know. For Buddhist Nagarjuna, the realisation of having a human body is a mere mental illusion. We are not ready to accept that a human is a computer made of meat. For a slave master, a human person is another animal, his sons and daughters are his personal property. sciences, at a point of perfection hitherto unattained, it is not necessary to intermix the different species of government. We have discovered, that one of them โ the best and purest โ that, in which the supreme power remains with the people at large, is capable of being formed, arranged, proportioned, and organised in such a manner, as to exclude the inconveniences, and to secure the advantages of all the three.โ9
It is precisely because of this achievement, however, that the American founders should be seen as continuing the classical notion of a republic as expounded by Cicero. The goals were the same, though the means were modern. The true republic is a constitutional order in which government is conducted according to rules and there is an apportionment and balance of powers to guard against their misuse, even by the people. Federalism as they framed it was also an improvement on the classical model because it could be directed to the same end:
โIn a single republic all the power surrendered by the people is submitted to the administration of a single government; and the usurpations are guarded against by a division of the government into distinct and separate departments. In the compound republic of America, the power surrendered by the people is first divided between two distinct governments, and then the portion allotted to each subdivided among distinct and separate departments. Hence a double security arises to the rights of the people. The different governments will control each other, at the same time that each will be controlled by itself.โ10
The American founders, in effect, gave a whole new life to the classical concept of a republic; as James Madison said, they constructed a โrepublican remedyโ for the diseases of past republics11.
It would therefore be by both older usage and the great example of modern times to apply the name โrepublicโ to balanced constitutions characterised by the supremacy of law and the division and separation of powers, and to avoid the โdebased contemporary senseโ of simply the absence of hereditary monarchy.
Something of an attempt to revive what might be regarded as the proper use of the word was made by Professor Bernard Crick in his new classification of governments into three classes: autocracies, republics and totalitarian states. His selection of names rested partly on historicalHistorical Old or ancient facts, which could be verified, are recorded after following a system. 'In the beginning was God' is a faith statement, not a historical Fact. Itihas (iti-ha-asa) in Sanskrit means it was there or as it existed, which is part of Smriti Parampara, verified facts, and Puranas are a collection of old stories of the vedic nation, which can not be verified, but they are with the people and recorded in books without verification. language usage and partly on usefulness for classification purposes:
โAnd if the Americans, to speak broadly, have debased the word โdemocracyโ into almost total uselessness as a scientific term, the French tradition of โrepublicโ, to speak with equal pedantry, has made us forget the Roman, the British Whig and the Dutch traditions in which โrepublican virtuesโ and โrepublican institutionsโ certainly did not imply โno kingโ, still less a dead one.โ12
On this fruitful system of classification, and also on the older and more meaningful usage, Australia, Britain and the United States are all republics, while Iraq and Saudi Arabia are autocracies, the former perhaps three parts of the way to a totalitarian state. It takes more than a sound analysis by a Professor, however, to divert the degeneration of modern language.
The reference to โrepublican virtueVirtue Aristotelian model: Excess Mean Deficiency >Irascibility Gentleness Spiritlessness >Rashness Courage Cowardice>Shamelessness Modesty Diffidence>Profligacy Temperance Insensitiveness>Envy Righteous Indignation Malice>Greed Justice Loss>Prodigality Liberality Meanness>Boastfulness Honesty Self-deprecation>Flattery Friendliness Surliness>Subservience Dignity Stubborness>Luxuriousness Hardness Endurance>Vanity Greatness of Spirit Smallness of Spirit>Extravagance Magnificence Shabbiness> Rascality Prudence Simpleness.โ reminds us that it was a classical tradition, which also lasted well into modern times, especially evident in Montesqieu, that a republic required a particular kind of virtue, encompassing an intense patriotism and devotion to the service of the state, resolution, fortitude and a high standard of personal moralityMorality Mental frame. It can be high morality or low morality, savage morality or civilised morality or Christian morality, or Nazi morality. Decent Behaviour is acceptable norms of the nations. Christian morality starts with the belief that all men are sinners and that repentance is the cause of divine mercy. Putting Crucified Christ in between is the destruction of Christian morality and logic. Now morality shifted to the personal choice of Jesus. What Jesus did is 'good'. The same would be the case of Ram, Krishna, Muhammad, Buddha, Lenin, etc. Pure Human Consciousness degraded to pure followership. There exists no proof the animals are devoid of morality. based on contempt for personal gain and on a strong sense of honour.
Recently there broke out a somewhat esoteric dispute among American academics as to whether the American founders were โclassical republicansโ in that tradition, or modern liberals who accepted that citizens of the new republic would basically pursue their own interests. It was concluded that they were in a transitional period between cultures13. Whatever one thinks of this thesis, this matter of republican virtue also serves as a reminder of the more substantial content of the concept of a republic.
There is wisdom in all of this for Australians as they contemplate whether to embrace republicanism in the โdebased contemporary senseโ by abolishing the monarchy. Those who wish to take this step generally speakingSpeech 400 million years ago, the larynx was developed and allowed for communication with other animals. 60 million years ago, human beings talked about Dynosure or like animals in India. The vocal tract was in place to support modern human discourse as early as 300,000ย years ago in the Indian subcontinent.ย ย are also those who wish to dismantle some of the structure of safeguards built into the Australian constitution, for example, federalism and the Senate.
Most are very anxious to convey that it is only a change of the method of appointment of the head of state which is in issue, and in order to keep to this path, and to avoid reviving awkward possibilities of a greater separation of powers, they are willing to forsake their democraticDemocracy It is commonly understood as being a political system of majority rule. The evolution of democratic tradition can be traced back to the Magna Carta (1215) and through the long struggle for Parliamentary supremacy which culminated in the English Bill of Rights of 1689, the emergence of representative political institutions in the colonial era, the development of responsible government in the 19th century. In institutional terms, democracy means that each of the provincial legislatures and the federal Parliament is elected by popular vote. These legislatures, are "at the core of the system of representative government". It is a 'power' word. Power rests with the ordinary Citizens. Only educated people understand power. A corrupt or controlled court system can cover failure of it. The religious concept is incompatible with it. Promise to spend more from the public treasury moves to Dictatorship. principles by having a president appointed by some method other than direct election14.
Perhaps the pole star which could best be kept in sight at this time is the principle that Australia should remain a republic, as it is, in the original and more meaningful sense of the word. A little republican virtue, conspicuously lacking in Australia, would also not go astray.
NOTES
1 OUP., 1986, pp 2-4.
2 ibid., p 2 and note 6.
3 The Early History of Rome, trans. A. de Selincourt, Penguin, 1986, pp 105-6.
4 trans. C.W. Keyes, Loeb, 1977, pp 218-223.
5 Peterson, Paul, โThe meaning of republicanism in The Federalistโ, Publius, Spring 1979, pp 44ff.
6 The Federalist No. 48, Everyman ed., 1978, p 254.
7 The Federalist No. 10, p 44. Madison’s diagnosis of rule by faction as the disease of democracy thus has obvious classical antecedents.
8 โThe separation of powers and the mixed regimeโ, Publius, Summer 1978, pp 33-43.
9 James Wilson, โLectures on Lawโ, quoted in Peterson, op. cit., p 68.
10 The Federalist No. 51, pp 265-6.
11 The Federalist No. 10, p 48.
12 โThe elementary types of governmentโ, Government and Opposition, Winter 1968, pp 7-8.
13 Lienesch, Michael, New Order of the Ages, Princeton, 1988, pp 3-9. See also Pangle, Thomas, The Spirit of Modern Republicanism, Chicago, 1988, pp 28-39.
14 Professor Winterton comes to this conclusion: op. cit., pp 108-114.
Read also:
De legibus-Treatise on Law: Marcus Tullius Cicero