Political Theories and Experiments in the Fourth Century B.C.
Literary verdict of the Greeks against democracy 110
Vacillation of modern critics 111
Grote's estimate of Pericles, compared with Plato's 111
The war policy of Pericles 112
His miscalculations 112
He depended on a city population against an army of yeomen 113
Advantages of mercenaries against citizen troops 114
The smaller States necessarily separatists 114
Attempts at federation 115
The second Athenian Confederacy 116
its details; its defects 116
Political theories in the fourth century 117
Greece and Persia 117
Theoretical politics 117
inestimable even to the practical historian 118
Plato 118
Xenophon 118
Aristotle 118
Sparta ever admired but never imitated 119
Practical legislation wiser in Greece than in modern Europe 119
Sparta a model for the theorists 120
A small State preferred 120
Plato's successors 120
Their general agreement; (1) especially on suffrage 121
even though their suffrage was necessarily restricted 122
(2) Education to be a State affair 122
Polybius' astonishment at the Roman disregard of it 123
The practical result in Rome 123
Can a real democracy ever be sufficiently educated? 124
Christianity gives us a new force 124
Formal religion always demanded by the Greeks 125
Real religion the property of exceptional persons 125
Greek views on music; discussed in my Rambles and Studies in Greece 126
Xenophon's ideal 127
Aristotle's ideal 127
Aristotle's Polities ignore Alexander 128
Evidence of the new Politeia 128
Alexander was to all the theorists an incommensurable quantity 129
Mortality of even perfect constitutions 130
Contrast of Greek and modern anticipations 130