NOVÁK, Miroslav. Sociopolitické změny, povstání, převraty, revoluce a jejich předcházení: pokus o rekonstrukci Aristotelovy koncepce (Sociopolitical changes, uprisings, coups, revolution and their prevention: Attempt to reconstruct Aristotle's concept). Acta Politologica. Praha, vol. 10, No 1, p. 86-138. ISSN 1803-8220. 2018.
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Basic information
Original name Sociopolitické změny, povstání, převraty, revoluce a jejich předcházení: pokus o rekonstrukci Aristotelovy koncepce
Name (in English) Sociopolitical changes, uprisings, coups, revolution and their prevention: Attempt to reconstruct Aristotle's concept
Authors NOVÁK, Miroslav (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition Acta Politologica, Praha, 2018, 1803-8220.
Other information
Original language Czech
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 50601 Political science
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
RIV identification code RIV/27590101:_____/18:00000004
Organization CEVRO Institut, z.ú. – Repository
Keywords in English Arisotle; socio-political changes; revolution
Changed by Changed by: Doc. PhDr. Miloš Brunclík, Ph.D., učo 2378. Changed: 25/4/2019 15:26.
Abstract
Článek se pokouší o rekonstrukci a vysvětlení Aristotelovy koncepce socio-politických změn, resp. revolucí. Argumentuje, že řada myšlenek, která jsou obecně spojovány se jmény pozdějších autorů (např. Marx, Tocqueville či Locke), se projevuje již u Aristotela.
Abstract (in English)
This article seeks to „reconstruct”, synoptically arrange and explain Aristotle's conception of socio-political changes, coups, uprisings, revolutions and their prevention, which is „chaotically” (Pierre Pellegrin) presented in the book V. of Politics. It is argued that a number of ideas that are commonly associated with Modern Age authors, such as Niccolo Machiavelli, John Locke, Alexis de Tocqueville, Karl Marx and in the early 20th century Max Weber, for instance, appeared much earlier with Aristotle. Aristotle builds on a vast documentation and comes from an analysis of equalities and inequalities. His conception of socio-political development is not cyclical (which is the case of Artistotle's great teacher Plato), but linear. Among political regimes Aristotle attributes a special position not only to democracy in ancient rendition, but above all to politeia in its own sense, which corresponds to our representative democracies to a large extent.
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