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A Temporary Dictatorship
Here is Mably on this subject of
the law and the legislator. In the passages preceding the one
here quoted, Mably has supposed the laws, due to a neglect of
security, to be worn out. He continues to address the reader
thusly:
"Under these circumstances, it is obvious that the
springs of government are slack. Give them a new tension, and the
evil will be cured.... Think less of punishing faults, and more
of rewarding that which you need. In this manner you will restore
to your republic the vigor of youth. Because free people have
been ignorant of this procedure, they have lost their liberty!
But if the evil has made such headway that ordinary governmental
procedures are unable to cure it, then resort to an extraordinary
tribunal with considerable powers for a short time. The
imagination of the citizens needs to be struck a hard blow."
In this manner, Mably continues through twenty volumes.
Under the
influence of teaching like thiswhich stems from classical
educationthere came a time when everyone wished to place
himself above mankind in order to arrange, organize, and regulate
it in his own way.
Clark Simmons, Webmaster
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