- Registrado
- 20 de Oct, 2014
I said i'd give you a reply- but I'm going to keep it brief as this is an old thread and I'd mostly be repeating earlier points.
If you read the germanic codes and compare them to that of Justinian it becomes very clear why they were sidelined. The roman system was better developed and better able to meet the needs of a more complex urbanised society in a fair and equitable way. Prof Robin Evans-Jones and Prof D. Mackenzie have written extensively on the subject. i' recommend looking into their work if you have the time.
I don't think believing in anarchy is the same as being apolitical. It is believing in not having an organised form of government. The political system is the lack of any organisation. Unlike a corporeal example like hair incorporeal systems can absolutely be negatives. Being apolitical is having an apathy or hostility towards political affiliations not necessarily believing in governance without a governmental system although i acknowledge that there will naturally be considerable overlap.
Your described society is what Christie identifies as Tribalism and while novel and different to what we currently have it is somewhere on the spectrum between the twin radical political-economic points of communism and anarchism. Where it sits would depend on the detail of the specific arrangements but if it functions at or close to either extreme i think it would fail.
Nils Christie writing in the 90s described a similar society amongst tribals in botswana. I think his writing while making some valid criticisms of western systems as they were massively over glamorized the way such contract based tribal arrangements actually function (or indeed malfunction) in practice. It wasn't my cup of tea but you might enjoy it- its full of theories and analogies comparing human behaviour to economics. I think. Its been a while since i read it.
I told you this wasn't worth waiting 10 hours for!
If you read the germanic codes and compare them to that of Justinian it becomes very clear why they were sidelined. The roman system was better developed and better able to meet the needs of a more complex urbanised society in a fair and equitable way. Prof Robin Evans-Jones and Prof D. Mackenzie have written extensively on the subject. i' recommend looking into their work if you have the time.
I don't think believing in anarchy is the same as being apolitical. It is believing in not having an organised form of government. The political system is the lack of any organisation. Unlike a corporeal example like hair incorporeal systems can absolutely be negatives. Being apolitical is having an apathy or hostility towards political affiliations not necessarily believing in governance without a governmental system although i acknowledge that there will naturally be considerable overlap.
Your described society is what Christie identifies as Tribalism and while novel and different to what we currently have it is somewhere on the spectrum between the twin radical political-economic points of communism and anarchism. Where it sits would depend on the detail of the specific arrangements but if it functions at or close to either extreme i think it would fail.
Nils Christie writing in the 90s described a similar society amongst tribals in botswana. I think his writing while making some valid criticisms of western systems as they were massively over glamorized the way such contract based tribal arrangements actually function (or indeed malfunction) in practice. It wasn't my cup of tea but you might enjoy it- its full of theories and analogies comparing human behaviour to economics. I think. Its been a while since i read it.
I told you this wasn't worth waiting 10 hours for!