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In 508 BCE, Athens launched history's first radical experiment in citizen rule—a system where ordinary people debated policy, voted on laws, and held magistrates accountable through public assembly. This examination of Athenian democracy reveals both its revolutionary achievements and its inherent contradictions, offering unexpected insights for contemporary political challenges. Drawing on archaeological findings, inscriptions, speeches, and philosophical texts, the narrative reconstructs how democratic institutions actually functioned. The Assembly gathered on the Pnyx hill where thousands of citizens argued foreign policy, declared war, and decided budgets. Juries of hundreds heard cases without professional judges. Officials were selected by lottery, not election, to prevent elite domination. Yet this participatory system excluded women, slaves, and foreigners—roughly 90% of Athens' population. The book traces democracy's evolution through Persian invasions, the Peloponnesian War, internal coups, and philosophical critiques from Plato and Aristotle. It examines how Athens balanced individual liberty with collective decision-making, managed populist pressures and elite influence, and confronted the tension between expertise and popular sovereignty—dilemmas strikingly familiar to modern democracies. Beyond idealized narratives, the analysis explores practical mechanisms: how debates were structured, how demagogues gained influence, how ostracism removed dangerous leaders, and why direct participation eventually gave way to representative systems. The Athenian experience illuminates persistent questions about citizenship, accountability, political education, and the fragility of democratic norms.
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Liczba stron: 178
Rok wydania: 2026
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